Europaudvalget 2011-12
EUU Alm.del Bilag 88
Offentligt
1039088_0001.png
Milking the poor
How EU subsidies hurt dairy producers in Bangladesh
September 2011
PDF to HTML - Convert PDF files to HTML files
1039088_0002.png
3 Milking the poor - How EU subsidies hurt dairy producers in Bangladesh
Contents
Introduction
Milk production in Bangladesh
– A way out of poverty
The problem of cheap imports
Arla foods:
profiting from exports of subsidised milk
The root of the problem: EU subsidies
Denmark’s milk production: A cash cow?
Conclusion
Annex
Endnotes
page 04
page 05
page 07
page 10
page 12
page 20
page 22
page 23
page 24
Milking the poor
How EU subsidies hurt dairy producers in Bangladesh
Authored by Mark Curtis, www.curtisresearch.org
Research by Danwatch, www.danwatch.dk
Published by ActionAid
September 2011
This independently researched report was commissioned by ActionAid. The views in this report do not neces-
sarily represent the views of the organisation. We are grateful for the work of Mark Curtis, who researched and
wrote this report, and for additional writing, research and editing by Steve Tibbett. We thank Danwatch for field
research and background material.
Cover photo: CARE Bangladesh
PDF to HTML - Convert PDF files to HTML files
1039088_0003.png
4 Milking the poor - How EU subsidies hurt dairy producers in Bangladesh
5 Milking the poor - How EU subsidies hurt dairy producers in Bangladesh
Introduction
“The rate we get for milk doesn’t suffice.” -
Hossain Fakir, Bangladeshi farmer
1
For decades, European dairy farmers have
been given massive subsidies under the Com-
mon Agricultural Policy (CAP) of the European
Union (EU). This has enabled them to export
cheap milk powder, among other products, at
prices lower than production costs. The EU’s
dairy regime has routinely damaged developing
countries in three main ways: by undermining
domestic dairy producers, by depressing world
market prices, and by pushing developing coun-
try exporters out of third markets.
2
In 2005, however, the EU decided to change the
nature of those subsidies by ‘decoupling’ them
from the production levels of farmers.
The aim was supposedly to avoid distorting
international trade and prices for agricultural
products. But the amount spent on subsidies re-
mains the same; it is only the way they are given
that has changed. The decoupled subsidies are
placed in what the World Trade Organisation
(WTO) refers to as the ‘Green Box’, which are
measures that have no, or at most minimal,
trade-distorting effects on production. Howe-
ver, this report shows that the EU’s decoupled
subsidies are continuing to hurt dairy farmers in
developing countries.
Looking at the case of Bangladesh, where mil-
lions of poor people support their low incomes
through milk production, the report reveals that
milk imports are continuing to undermine poor
farmers, competing on unfair terms with locally
produced milk and suppressing investment in
the dairy industry. It also shows that the giant
Danish-Swedish dairy company, Arla Foods, is
profiting from EU-subsidised milk powder sales
to Bangladesh which are harming Bangladeshi
milk farmers.
The report highlights the fact that many Euro-
pean farmers - including Danish farmers - are
selling below production costs and that some
would not even be able to maintain production
without EU subsidies, and thus those exports
are only possible thanks to the continuation
of subsidies. At the same time, Denmark and
the European Commission (EC) are funding aid
programmes in Bangladesh to reduce poverty,
including those designed to support agricultural
development.
The EU is preparing a comprehensive reform of
the CAP, which is expected to come into force in
2014. Most of the negotiations will take place in
autumn 2011 and spring 2012, when Denmark
will hold the presidency of the EU. According to
the United Nations Special Rapporteur on the
Right to Food, the reform of the CAP offers a
“unique opportunity” to take into account the
impact of the EU’s agricultural policies on the
right to food in developing countries.
3
Indeed,
CAP reform is the ultimate test of the EU’s wil-
lingness to fulfil its treaty-bound obligations to
ensure that all its policies are coherently promo-
ting development in poor countries.
Milk production in Bangladesh
– A way out of poverty
Around 150 million farm households across the
world are involved in milk production, amounting
to some 750 to 900 million people (or 12-14 per
cent of the world’s population)
4
. In Bangladesh,
1.4 million family dairy farms, comprising around
7 million people, work very small plots of land
and typically own two cows. Amongst these
dairy farmers are some of the poorest and most
marginalised women.
5
Amidst widespread poverty milk-producing
cows are one of the most valuable assets rural
households can own. Cows can provide farmers
with a regular cash flow from milk sales, nutritio-
nal milk for home consumption, draught power
and manure for fertiliser.
6
Milk, the source of
vital vitamins and minerals, is a crucial source
of nutrition in a country which has one of the
highest rates of under-nutrition in the world; 48
per cent of Bangladesh’s children are chronically
undernourished and 30 per cent of the total
population is below the minimum level of dietary
energy consumption.
7
However, the incomes of most dairy farmers are
extremely low, usually ranging from Taka 31 – 60
(€ 0.30 - 0.59) per day.
11
Many dairy farmers
both consume and sell some of their milk,
generating income for the family. More than 90
per cent of small farmers’ milk is sold through
informal channels, such as to neighbours or at
the local market; less than 10 per cent is sold to
formal milk processing companies.
12
Dairy farming is a potential pathway out of
poverty for millions of Bangladeshis. Indeed,
the country has already developed successful
examples of commercial dairy farming whereby
tens of thousands of smallholders, organised
in hundreds of cooperatives, provide milk to
commercial enterprises which is then proces-
sed and distributed throughout the country.
By some estimates, tens of thousands of poor
rural households have already graduated out of
poverty as a result of such models.
14
Studies
suggest that dairy production, processing and
marketing in Bangladesh generate more regular
cash income and employment per unit value
than crop farming.
15
Bangladesh is also internationally well placed
to produce milk - what some economists might
call a ‘comparative advantage’. Along with many
other developing countries, Bangladesh is a
relatively low cost producer of milk, in contrast
to high cost producers in Europe and the US.
17
One recent analysis found that a typical farm in
Bangladesh (with two cows) produces milk 50
per cent cheaper than a typical farm in Germany
(with 31 cows.) The same study found that for
every million kg of milk produced by EU dairy
farmers, 7.6 jobs are created, but in Bangladesh
the number is 350 jobs – 46 times as many.
18
Indeed, the milk industry in Bangladesh also has
a huge potential for growth due to the growing
domestic demand for milk that comes with rising
Poverty in
Bangladesh
Bangladesh has a
population of over 160
million of whom 72 per
cent live in rural areas.
Around half the rural
population live below
the poverty line
8
.
More than half of rural
dwellers own less than
0.5 acres and the po-
orest 40 per cent pos-
sess just 3 per cent of
the land.
9
Agriculture
employs 70 million
people and accounts
for 20 per cent of the
national GDP.
10
The supply chain of milk in Bangladesh
13
 
PDF to HTML - Convert PDF files to HTML files
1039088_0004.png
6 Milking the poor - How EU subsidies hurt dairy producers in Bangladesh
7 Milking the poor - How EU subsidies hurt dairy producers in Bangladesh
The problem of cheap imports
Dairy Farming: A powerful tool for reducing poverty
A recent study by the UN’s Food and Agriculture Organisation (FAO) notes
that small-scale milk production not only improves the food security of
milk-producing households but also helps to create numerous employ-
ment opportunities throughout the dairy chain, such as in small-scale rural
processing and intermediary activities. The strengths of smallholder dairy
systems include low production costs, relative resilience to rising feed
prices and low liabilities. The study also notes that the overall profitability
of milk production appears to be higher in developing countries than in
industrialised countries, mainly because of the lower costs of feed and
the overall ‘low-tech’ approach. It argues that, if they are well-organised,
smallholder producers should be able to compete with large-scale, capital
intensive and ‘hightech’ dairy farming systems in industrialised countries.
Smallholder dairy farming has been shown to be successful in a number
of countries, notably in India and Kenya. However the study finds that one
threat to this potential is from policy support for (and competition from)
dairy farmers in OECD country governments for their farmers. Other chal-
lenges to small producers include access to technical knowhow, support
services and credit, and poor milk quality.
16
milk
22
, and the growth rate of livestock is less
than 4 per cent.
23
Yields can also be increased.
They are currently low and largely variable
because of poor feed resources and the breed
of cattle typically owned.
24
Among small produ-
cers, a typical cow yields 721 kg per year,
25
far
less than cows in neighbouring countries such
as Pakistan and India.
26
Bangladeshi milk pro-
ducers also face many other challenges, notably
the lack of availability of appropriate feed at low
prices and livestock health care.
27
The potential for increased production is shown
in the 16 per cent spike in production in 2007/8,
which coincided with a ‘melamine scare’ – the
fear that a potentially toxic chemical compound
was present in some brands of powdered milk
from China. This caused some consumers of
powder milk to shift to raw or pasteurized milk
creating. The scare created a temporary extra
demand for fresh milk.
28
Private sector entrepreneurs have already ventu-
red into the growing market of the dairy sector,
supporting small farms with improved dairy
breeds, quality input supplies, as well as marke-
ting facilities for milk products.
29
With higher milk
prices, private participation in the development
of the sector can be anticipated to increase.
30
In its ’Poverty Reduction Strategy Paper’ of
2009, the Bangladeshi government states that
it is striving to be self-sufficient in food by 2013,
taking all possible measures to ensure food
security for all its citizens. One of the identified
requirements to reach this goal is to create “a
level playing field to compete with others and
reap the benefits of a globalized world”
31
. The
government recognises that it is important to
support the milk sector and has taken several
steps to do so in recent years.
A key factor undermining Bangladesh’s milk
industry is imported milk powder. Whole milk
powder is imported and marketed directly to
consumers, and skimmed milk powder is im-
ported and used for production of dairy pro-
ducts. For one thing, this is a massive cost to
the country. In 2007-08, 41,000 tonnes of milk
powder were imported at a cost of Taka 10.5
billion (€ 102.5 million).
32
Overall, Bangladesh
imports around 27 per cent of its milk consump-
tion needs
33
and between 20 and 50 per cent
of imports of skimmed milk powder have come
from the EU in recent years.
34
With the right support and further development
of the dairy sector, these imports could have
been produced by Bangladeshi farmers them-
selves. Not only do imports cost a lot, they often
enter Bangladesh at prices competitive with
domestic milk and are heavily marketed and
branded, undercutting local producers of fresh
milk and domestic processors of milk powder.
Importers have considerable market power,
especially in urban markets.
35
In Bangladesh, the price of fresh milk is also
influenced by milk powder prices because milk
powder is a substitute for fresh milk. Local milk
processors will increase their use of skimmed
milk powder instead of fresh milk if the price of
imports, including tariffs, falls below the local
milk price.
36
The EU exported 378,000 tonnes of skim-
med milk powder around the world in 2010,
up 63 per cent from 2009; a further 11 per
cent increase is projected for 2011.
44
EU milk
powder exports go mainly to developing coun-
tries, particularly in Africa and the Middle East.
Indeed, the EU supplies around 70 per cent of
sub-Saharan Africa’s dairy imports.
45
Imports of
skimmed milk powder are the greatest concern
Cheap imports with devastating effects
In 2009, the Bangladeshi media reported that prices of imported milk
powder fell close to US$ 2,000 (€ 1,510) a tonne from more than US$
4,500 (€ 3,398) in 2008. The retail price of a litre of milk fell from Taka
33 (€ 0.32) at the beginning of 2009 to around Taka 26 (€ 0.25) by
mid-year.
37
This price fall inspired sweet makers, who buy much of the
milk produced in Bangladesh, to shift from purchasing milk produced
by local farmers to purchasing imported milk powder.
38
In April 2009,
hundreds of dairy farmers poured milk onto highways to protest against
falling prices and cheap imports.
39
Both large and small dairy farmers
suffered and many said that the price they received was now below the
costs of production. Some farmers saw their incomes from milk fall by
40 per cent.
40
incomes and changing diets. Current consump-
tion of milk and milk products in Bangladesh is
low; the average Bangladeshi consumes 42 ml
of milk per day – mainly for drinking in tea.
19
This is significantly less than the average for
developing countries (120 g) and well below
the 280 g per day recommended by the FAO
and the World Health Organisation (WHO)
20
.
However, milk demand in Bangladesh is already
greater than the current production of 2.7 million
tonnes of milk a year, with one estimate being as
high as 7.2 million tonnes.
21
Recent figures cited
by Community-based Dairy Veterinary Founda-
tion suggest that in order to be self-sufficient
in milk production by 2021, Bangladesh has to
produce 17.9 million tonnes of milk, and to meet
growing customer demand, the industry would
have to grow by more than 10 per cent.
Domestic production can indeed be increased.
Currently, only 3.5 million cattle out of a total
cattle population of 24 million actually produce
The problem with importing
EU milk powder
“The availability of EU powdered milk on the
world market remains unfair competition, limiting
the growth of the dairy sector in developing
countries and undermining the incentives for
farmers to boost local production to keep track
with the growing demand.” (Recent analysis by
Trinity College Dublin
43
)
PDF to HTML - Convert PDF files to HTML files
1039088_0005.png
8 Milking the poor - How EU subsidies hurt dairy producers in Bangladesh
9 Milking the poor - How EU subsidies hurt dairy producers in Bangladesh
Noorjahan, a dairy farmer
41
Dairy farmer Noorjahan lives in a small house with her daughter and
one cow close to Sirajganj city in central Bangladesh. The cow gives
her milk, which she sells to the dairy company, Milk Vita, for Taka 30 (€
0.29) per litre. The income from the milk covers most of her household
costs and enables her to pay for her daughter’s preparation classes
for college. But Noorjahan argues that dairy processors like Milk Vita
should pay a larger share of the retail price to farmers. Noorjahan
thinks she should get at least 40 taka (€ 0.39) per litre. Currently, the
farm gate price of milk does not leave much profit after the costs of
rearing the cows are met.
to milk producers in the African, Caribbean and
Pacific (ACP)
46
states with whom the EU has
formal trade and aid agreements. Even relatively
small volumes of EU exports to smaller ACP
markets can have an impact on the local dairy
sector, given the volume of EU exports relative
to national ACP market demand. Increased milk
powder imports can reduce both demands for,
and prices of, locally produced milk, disrupting
the development of local supply chains.
47
NGOs
have long shown the devastating impacts of
cheap dairy imports in Africa and the Caribbean,
as a result of the CAP.
48
In Bangladesh, the Bangladesh Milk Producers
Cooperative Union, known as Milk Vita, had vir-
tually collapsed by the mid-1980s, with problem
attributed to unfair competition from imports
flooding in from subsidised over-production in
Europe.
49
At Milk Vita, the gap between milk
supply and demand was originally met by re-
combining butter oil and skimmed milk powder
(that DANIDA and the EU provided) into liquid
milk. By the end of the 1970s, village coop-
eratives had been established and annual milk
collection from some 36 000 smallholders had
been built up to 15 million litres. But by the mid
1980s, Milk Vita had virtually collapsed, collec-
ting less than 3 million litres of milk a year. The
collapse was attributed to unfair competition
from imports flooding in from subsidized over-
production in Europe. At this time whole milk
powder was retailing at less than 20 percent of
its cost price in Europe and one-third of the cost
of milk production in Bangladesh.
50
A counter-argument put forward by some is
that the EU milk powder imports increase the
availability of dairy products, particularly in
urban areas, and benefit consumers who might
not otherwise be able to afford them. In many
African countries, for example, domestic supply
cannot keep up with the growth in domestic de-
mand. In Bangladesh, the domestic supply can-
not meet the demand because of the continued
underdevelopment in the sector. In addition to
this, the middle and upper class tend to prefer
milk powder due to its practicality, reliability and
marketing. The poorer sections of the population
tend to avoid consumption of milk due to limited
availability and high prices. Increased domestic
production and availability of fresh quality milk
would help solve these problems.
Milk powder imports increase competition with
domestic milk producers and reduced incentives
for domestic investment and expansion and
also deter small producers from producing more
milk to satisfy local demands. Looking at recent
prices it is important to note that although local
milk is currently slightly cheaper than imported
milk, imported milk powder is not only compa-
rable in terms of price, but also more intensively
marketed than local milk.
To support dairy farmers the Bangladeshi
government has imposed a certain level of trade
tariffs on imported milk powder. Tariffs have fal-
len in recent years from as high as 75 per cent in
2007 to a proposal in the last budget to reduce
them to as low as 5 per cent.
53
This prompted
protests from local milk producers for whom ta-
riffs are their only protection against competition
from developed countries’ milk powder brands,
including subsidised EU milk.
A local entrepreneur in the dairy sector said:
“The local dairy industry is not getting mom-
entum because of the government’s excessive
liberal policy”.
54
Domestic milk prices are no longer controlled,
and the government eliminated direct subsidies
to farmers in 1996 and only temporarily rein-
stated smaller subsidies in 2002 before soon
discontinuing them.
55
The government provides
subsidies only to Milk Vita in the form of low
Milk Prices in supermarkets Dhaka-Bangladesh
– July 2011
51
Local Fresh Milk:
Milk Vita 1 liter = 52 Taka
Aarong (BRAC) 1 liter = 52 Taka
Powder Milk:
(400 g of powder makes 3.1 litres of milk)
52
400g Aarong 180 Taka (local)
400g Starship 180 Taka (Australia)
400g Marks 195 Taka (New Zealand)
400g Farmland 200 Taka (New Zealand)
400g Dano 210 Taka (Denmark)
400g Red Cow 215 Taka (New Zealand)
400g Diploma, 220 Taka (New Zealand/Australia)
400g Anchor 245 Taka (New Zealand)
500g Milk Vita 210 Taka (local)
500g Aarong 240 Taka (local)
500g Pran 240 Taka (local)
500g Dano 257 Taka (Denmark)
Note: During Ramadan and Eid, fresh milk prices tend to rise to 70
Taka per litre.
Waz Ali, a dairy farmer
42
Waz Ali is a dairy farmer in Sirajganj, a major dairy hub, who owns 23
cows producing 100 litres of milk a day – a relatively large farmer for
Bangladesh. He said that his income fell from Taka 24,000 (€ 234) a
week before the price was cut to Taka 18,000 (€ 176) a week after. “I
sold one of my cows last month to pay micro credit instalment as my
weekly income from milk sales dropped by Tk 6,000 (€ 59) because of
the price cut”, said Waz Ali.
interest loans, grants and project funds – useful
support to the company but which prevents
other milk processing firms from competing in
the market.
56
The dairy industry’s contribution
to the national GDP is around 2.7 per cent, yet
the government’s budget allocation to the sector
is ten times less, at just 0.27 per cent.
57
Thus,
the government in Bangladesh should seek to
employ a comprehensive strategy to ensure that
its dairy farmers are supported and invest in the
dairy sector so that it develops its potential and
competitiveness.
PDF to HTML - Convert PDF files to HTML files
1039088_0006.png
10 Milking the poor - How EU subsidies hurt dairy producers in Bangladesh
11 Milking the poor - How EU subsidies hurt dairy producers in Bangladesh
Arla Foods: Profiting from
exports of subsidised milk
One of the biggest exporters of milk powder to
Bangladesh is the Danish-Swedish dairy giant
Arla Foods, which has supplied between 3.700
and 6,000 tonnes of milk powder to Bang-
ladesh per year in recent years.
58
Arla Foods
manufactures the leading foreign milk powder
brand in Bangladesh – Dano, which has recently
accounted for over 20 per cent of all milk sales
in the country.
59
Dano milk powder is mainly
exported as bulk and repacked into consumer
bags at a plant in Bangladesh that employs
around 50 people.
60
The box below
61
shows that Arla has been a
large exporter of milk to Bangladesh for many
years and that a fall in Arla’s exports coincided
with the melamine scandal in 2008. Since then,
exports have started to pick up again.
Arla has received nearly one billion Euros in
subsidies from the EU since 2000
62
, allowing it
to establish a strong position in the Bangladeshi
dairy market. Although direct EU support to Arla
has reduced in recent years, the farmers supply-
ing Arla continue to receive substantial subsidies.
Arla Foods’ literature does not mention the
adverse impacts that its milk powder exports
might have on Bangladeshi dairy farmers. By
contrast, the most recent press release (from
2007) mentioning Dano on Arla Foods’ website
is entitled ‘Dano sales are booming in Bangla-
desh’, and notes that “Dano milk powder is a
real hit with Bangladeshi consumers”. In 2006,
they drank 240 million glasses of the product.
”We’ve succeeded in doubling sales over nine
years, a result we’re very proud of,” a company
spokesperson was quoted as saying.
63
The trade is certainly profitable. Arla Foods’
milk powder for consumers
64
, which is exported
primarily to developing countries, generated
revenues of DKK 831 million (€ 112 million) in
2010 (1.7 per cent of total company revenues).
65
According to Arla Foods, sales of milk powder
in developing countries generate more earnings
than sales of high quality cheese to Danish
consumers.
66
Around 15 per cent of Arla Foods’
whole milk powder exports go to Asia, but the
company does not provide figures on how much
profit it makes from sales in Bangladesh.
67
ethical business practices.
71
Arla Foods states
that it:
“has a responsibility for society, the environment
and the people who interface with our pro-
ducts and production...Arla Foods addresses
ethical and quality matters in a sustainable and
responsible manner, in order to safeguard the
company’s reputation and profitability. Our ob-
jective is to develop our business on a founda-
tion of long-term perspectives with respect for,
and in harmony with, our surroundings.
72
In the company’s code of conduct - called ’Our
Responsibility’ - Arla Foods states:
“We support competition on equal terms... We
interact with local communities and contribute to
their development... In the markets in which we
are a major player, we have the added responsi-
bility of not abusing our position.
73
Some of these claims - e.g. that Arla Foods
contributes to the development of local commu-
nities - are questionable in light of Arla Foods’
subsidised milk powder exports to Bangladesh.
Arla Foods’ only CSR project in Bangladesh is
called “Children for Life”, which provides one
glass of milk a day to around 800 children in three
countries – Vietnam, the Dominican Republic and
Bangladesh. The project costs DKK 1 million (€
134,228), which amounts to 0.08 per cent of the
company’s net profits in 2010. In Bangladesh, the
project begun in 2010 and “provides teaching,
food and milk” for 235 pupils at a school in the
slum area of Korali on the outskirts of Dhaka.
74
Arla Foods’ primary donation in the project is
Arla’s own imported milk powder. Yet, a 2007
study for the FAO states: “School milk feeding
schemes based on imported pre-packed milk
are seen as counter-productive to sustainable
smallholder dairy development”.
75
Arla Foods
Arla Foods is a global dairy company and a co-operative owned mainly by
Danish and Swedish dairy farmers, plus a small number of German far-
mers. Arla Foods has a virtual monopoly on milk and dairy production in
Sweden and Denmark and is Scandinavia’s biggest producer of milk pow-
der, which it manufactures in two factories in Denmark and its newest one
in Sweden
68
. It has production facilities in 13 countries and sales offices
in a further 20, with more than 16,000 employees. Its best known brands
include Arla, Lurpak and Castello, which it sells to over 100 countries.
Arla Foods’ largest market is the UK, where it is the second largest dairy
company; it is currently building the world’s largest milk dairy in London.
69
In 2010 the company’s turnover was DKK 49 billion (€ 6.6 billion); and its
net profit was DKK 1.27 billion (€ 170 million).
70
Corporate social responsibility
Arla Foods Exports of Milk Powder to
Bangladesh 1988-2008
Arla Foods says it is a socially responsible
company and produces an annual corporate
social responsibility (CSR) report. Since 2008,
Arla Foods has also been linked to the Global
Compact, a UN voluntary initiative to promote
 
Furthermore, the company’s CSR report is ex-
plicit in stating that this CSR project is intimately
related to its sales strategy. Its 2010 report sta-
tes: “The Children for Life project was conceived
...by the department responsible for sales of milk
powder across the world”. It also states: “Apart
from the three countries in which the Children
for Life project is currently running, Nigeria and
China are also important markets for Arla Foods’
milk powder. For this reason, there are plans to
set up similar projects there”.
76
PDF to HTML - Convert PDF files to HTML files
1039088_0007.png
12 Milking the poor - How EU subsidies hurt dairy producers in Bangladesh
13 Milking the poor - How EU subsidies hurt dairy producers in Bangladesh
The root of the problem:
EU subsidies
At the root of the problem of cheap milk powder
imports in Bangladesh are the massive subsi-
dies given to European dairy farmers.
77
These
subsidies contrast with the plight of Bangladeshi
milk producers, who, as noted, receive no direct
support from their government:
• The ‘single payment’ scheme of decoupled
payments
delivers a massive € 5 billion per
year to EU dairy farmers. This level of sup-
port has risen from around € 2.75 billion in
2005 and € 4.5 billion in 2007.
78
• In addition, EU dairy farmers are protected
by high
EU import tariffs,
which effectively
close the EU market to dairy imports from
third countries (apart from the limited
volumes which enter under quota arrange-
ments and preferential agreements).
79
• The EU also maintains a policy of direct
intervention
to buy farmers’ outputs at a
certain period of the year to maintain market
prices.
• In addition, the EU has in recent years
initiated major
‘safety-net’ support
programmes
for dairy farmers to sustain
milk production in the face of price declines.
In 2009, for example, the EU spent an
additional € 600 million on top of the € 5
billion in direct payments in response
to low prices at the time.
• The EU also pays farmers an export
subsidy
(or ‘refund’) at times when
Europe an dairy prices are higher than
world prices to enable them to access
world markets. During 1996 to 2006, EU
export subsidies on dairy products were
high, ranging from € 475 million to € 1.8
billion.
80
Overall, export subsidies have been
reduced in recent years and, since the
end of 2009, have been set at zero.
They were revoked for the first time in
40 years in 2007, but revived in January
2009 to help the industry cope with a global
price slump.
81
At this point, the EU began
offering subsidies of up to 50 per cent on
its milk powder, butter and cheese exports.
82
At the 2005 WTO negotiations, it was
agreed that all export subsidies should end
by 2013, provided that a full multilateral
trade agreement had been reached,
but these negotiations are still ongoing.
260 (€ 35) per 100 kg,
94
and corresponds to
15 per cent of the export price, meaning that
without the subsidies, Arla Foods would have
had to raise the export price 15 per cent to earn
the same income. This cost was covered by
European taxpayers.
‘Decoupled’ payments increase
production and reduce world prices
Proponents of decoupled payments claim that
after having switched from traditional subsidies
that increased as production rose, the new
system has no impact on production or interna-
tional trade flows. Yet, several recent academic
studies show the opposite, that decoupled
payments do indeed increase production in the
EU and help to reduce international prices, and
thus may inflict economic injury upon third coun-
tries.
96
Similarly, a 2010 report by the Danish
Economic Council, states that the CAP ”leads
to a higher level of production compared to a
free market situation” and that Danish agricultu-
ral production, for example, would fall if the EU
subsidies were phased out.
97
The effect on prices is serious in that low prices
for milk sales is a major problem faced by Bang-
ladeshi milk farmers, evidenced in the recent
protests noted above. In a 2008 survey of dairy
farmers in northern Bangladesh by CARE-Bang-
ladesh, low price was identified as the major
challenge, mentioned by 42 per cent of those
surveyed.
98
The EU as a milk producer and exporter
86
The EU with its 27 member countries is the world’s biggest producer
of milk, accounting for around a quarter of the world total, ahead of the
United States and India.
87
The EU is also the world’s second largest
exporter of milk (after New Zealand), and accounted for 26 per cent of
whole milk powder exports and 27 per cent of skimmed milk powder
exports in 2010.
88
There are over one million milk producers in the EU.
89
Export subsidies and Arla Foods
When dairy prices fell in early 2009, the EU
reintroduced both export ‘refunds’ and milk pre-
miums for farmers based on the amount of milk
produced: an aid package of € 280 million for EU
dairy farmers was agreed on and € 600 million
budgeted for market measures.
90
In Denmark,
4,300 milk producers received DKK 73.3 million
(€ 9.8 million) in milk premiums.
91
Danish milk
processed by Arla Foods in 2009/10 was sup-
ported with approximately DKK 64.1 million
(€ 8.6 million).
92
Export subsidies were also
reintroduced in Denmark. All of this was in ad-
dition to the normal subsidies granted to farmers.
In the first nine months of 2009, Arla Foods
exported 1.5 million kg of milk powder to
Bangladesh at the price of DKK 26 million (€ 35
million).
93
This was subsidised at a rate of DKK
The Common Agricultural Policy (CAP)
The CAP was one of the first policies of the European Community in
the 1950s – aimed at making Europe self-sufficient in food by ensuring
a stable supply of food for European citizens at a low price, and a rea-
sonable selling price for farmers. Although the level of farm subsidies
has reduced since the 1950s, the CAP remains the biggest item on
the EU budget, accounting for 40 per cent of the total EU budget in
2011.
83
In 2010 the CAP budget amounted to € 43.8 billion.
84
Direct
farm subsidies are by far the largest expenditure of the CAP. Studies
show that many of the recipients of CAP subsidies are not small
farmers but large landowners and agribusiness, over 1,000 of whom
have become ‘farm subsidy millionaires’.
85
EU export subsidies also
reduce world prices
The EU’s export subsidies, by encouraging
production and export, have also tended to
lower world market prices for milk. Without the
subsidies, the EU would produce less and have
fewer goods to export at low prices, which
would increase world market prices, and shift
the balance of trade towards third countries.
102
CAP Expenditure and CAP Reform
95
While the form of subsidy has moved away from coupled payment and
export subsidies, the overall level of farm subsidies is still comparable
with the level of the early 1980s in terms of the proportion of EU GDP
it represents. Overall - in part due to the expansion of the EU - the level
of support has increased. As well as undermining developing countries’
milk producers by promoting cheap imports, these EU subsidies also
depress world market prices.
PDF to HTML - Convert PDF files to HTML files
1039088_0008.png
14 Milking the poor - How EU subsidies hurt dairy producers in Bangladesh
15 Milking the poor - How EU subsidies hurt dairy producers in Bangladesh
33
tA b l e
1
‘Green Box’ subsidies can be trade-distorting
Since the EU argues that decoupled payments have no impact on
production or international trade flows, they are placed in what the
WTO refers to as the ‘Green Box’ in international trade discussions. Yet
the ‘Green Box’ designation is disputed by several actors. Some argue
that subsidies in the form of decoupled payments allow for “effects
on farmers’ ability to cover fixed and/or variable costs; ... isolates the
farmer from market signals and reduces risks, etc”. It is also argued
that, out of all the ‘Green Box’ direct payments, ‘decoupled’ income
support programmes distort trade the most.
99
A study by researchers at Humboldt university in Berlin found that
decoupled payments are not production neutral, but act to stimulate
production and investment in agriculture compared to a situation
with no subsidies. In particular, decoupled EU farm subsidies provide
funding to producers, reduce risk and generate the expectation on
the part of the recipients that future changes in agricultural policies
may also be based on past production, as they currently are. All of this
ensures that farmers maintain production at a higher level than without
such subsidies.
100
Similarly, a recent analysis by the International Centre for Trade and
Sustainable Development in Geneva concludes that “evidence … sug-
gests that the sheer volume of subsidies provided may have risk/insu-
rance effects on production - even if such support is provided through
relatively decoupled policies.” It also notes that “existing studies show
that Green Box subsidies encourage agricultural production by creating
a guaranteed income stream and a lower perceived risk for farmers,
which raises the potential for overproduction”.
101
price would lead to a loss of income for a typical
Bangladeshi dairy farm of Taka 3,425 (€ 36) per
year – a reduction in dairy income of 43 per cent
and a loss in overall household income of 7–16
per cent. Around 7 million people would be af-
fected by these income losses.
104
Farmers surviving only by subsidies
“European producers [of basic milk products
such as butter and milk powder] have only been
competitive on world markets when prices have
been high. Outside these periods, they can only
export with the assistance of the Community
budget.”
106
As the above quote from the European Court
of Auditors suggests, many EU dairy farmers
who are effectively competing with, and under-
mining, their Bangladeshi counterparts, could
not survive without subsidies. Other evidence
supports this view. A recent study by academics
at Humboldt University in Berlin, for example,
found that during 2004-08, the returns to dairy
farmers in Germany amounted to just 49-59 per
cent of their costs. Thus “the Common Agricul-
tural Policy has enabled and continues to enable
farmers to sell below cost”.
107
The table shows the proportion of dairy farmers’
gross income accounted for by subsidies paid
to them. The figures range from a massive 77
per cent in Finland to 16 per cent in Italy for
2006. In Denmark, 31 per cent of dairy far-
mers’ gross income was made up of subsidy
payments in 2006 – a proportion that has risen
considerably since 2000.
Other sources suggest that many EU farms
(not just dairy farms) would simply close down
without subsidies. The EU figures show that the
share of direct payments and total subsidies in
agricultural factor income is 28 per cent and 40
per cent, respectively, for the EU-27, suggesting
that much EU agricultural production would not
be economically sustainable in the absence of
this support.
109
In 2005/06, only 35 per cent
of farms in EU-25 were able to cover all costs.
This was especially the case for small farms.
The share of profitable large farms was only just
above 62 per cent.
110
s u b s i d i e s A s A s h A r e o f G r o s s i n co m e o f d A i ry fA r m s
tAX e s A
as
e v i e (
gross income of
2006 )
Subsidies
n d
a
l
share
s
of
2000, 2004 A n d
dairy farms
before taxes and levies (2000, 2004 and 2006)
108
2000
Belgium
Czech Republic
Denmark
Germany
Greece
Spain
Estonia
France
Hungary
Ireland
Italy
Lithuania
Luxembourg
Latvia
Netherlands
Austria
Poland
Portugal
Finland
Sweden
Slovakia
Slovenia
United Kingdom
16 %
18 %
72 %
36 %
4%
32 %
31 %
15 %
10 %
22 %
18 %
18 %
14 %
5%
12 %
32 %
33 %
42 %
22 %
11 %
35 %
43 %
58 %
12 %
44 %
22 %
27 %
73 %
41 %
43 %
37 %
23 %
11 %
2004
19 %
44 %
28 %
31 %
2006
28 %
60 %
31 %
36 %
46 %
17 %
43 %
40 %
41 %
36 %
16 %
37 %
46 %
63 %
23 %
42 %
35 %
37 %
77 %
56 %
65 %
37 %
34 %
According to the Agritrade:
“While the EU routinely cuts export refund
levels for dairy commodities when world
market prices rise, it is the opposite
trend, of increasing export refund levels
when world market prices fall, which is
the major source of concern in Africa.
While the export of milk powder as raw
materials for use in newly established
African dairies can enhance capacity utili-
sation and financial viability while dome-
stic supplies are built up, this requires a
carefully conceived import-management
policy linked to a national dairy-sector
development, if unregulated dairy imports
are not to undermine local investor
confidence in the returns which can be
obtained from dairy-sector investments.
This is the principal concern regarding
the impact of EU dairy-sector policies....
The EU’s active use of a range of support
measures to sustain and promote dome-
stic EU dairy production, many of which
have important external implications ...,
by insulating EU milk producers from the
worst effects of price declines, sustain
EU milk production and subsequent
exports at levels which would simply not
be the case in the absence of this range
of safety-net interventions. Being unable
to benefit from similar support measures,
dairy producers in ACP countries would
have to bear the full risk of severe dairy-
market price volatility, particularly during
periods of declining prices.”
105
Although export subsidies are currently set at zero,
they can be reimposed, as they were in 2009.
In a 2009 study, the International Farm Compa-
rison Network (IFCN) estimated that the removal
of EU export subsidies would increase world
dairy prices by 16.7 per cent.
103
Its analysis also
showed that an EU export subsidy of € 5 per
100 kg of milk – which prevailed in 2009 when
the EU reintroduced export subsidies – redu-
ces the world market price by € 2.5 per kg. In
Bangladesh, the impact on family farm income is
significant. Such a reduction in the world market
S ource:
fadn gross farm income before taxes, levies and vat = gross farm income
(se 410) — the balance of current farm subsidies and taxes (se 600) + total farm
subsidies (se 605).
special report no 14/2009 – Have the management instruments applied to the market in milk and milk products achieved their main objectives?
special report no 14/2009 – Have the management instruments applied to the market in milk and milk products achi
PDF to HTML - Convert PDF files to HTML files
1039088_0009.png
50
2400
2200
16 Milking the poor - How EU subsidies hurt dairy producers in Bangladesh
40
EUR / 100 kg milk ECM
35
30
25
20
15
BDT / 100 kg milk ECM
45
2000
1800
1600
1400
1200
1000
800
600
17 Milking the poor - How EU subsidies hurt dairy producers in Bangladesh
10
5
0
Quota costs
Opportunity costs
Cost P&L - non milk returns
Milk price
400
200
0
Jan. 06
Feb. 06
Mrz. 06
Apr. 06
Mai. 06
Jun. 06
Jul. 06
Aug. 06
Sep. 06
Okt. 06
Nov. 06
Dez. 06
Jan. 07
Feb. 07
Mrz. 07
Apr. 07
Mai. 07
Jun. 07
Jul. 07
Aug. 07
Sep. 07
Okt. 07
Nov. 07
Dez. 07
Jan. 08
Feb. 08
Mrz. 08
Apr. 08
Mai. 08
Jun. 08
Jul. 08
Aug. 08
Sep. 08
Okt. 08
Nov. 08
Dez. 08
Jan. 09
Feb. 09
Mrz. 09
Apr. 09
Mai. 09
Jun. 09
Opportunity costs
Cost P&L - non milk returns
Milk price
Income from dairy farming
30
114
1400
25
1200
20
EUR / 100 kg milk ECM
BDT / 100 kg milk ECM
1000
15
800
10
600
5
400
0
Jan. 06
Feb. 06
Mrz. 06
Apr. 06
Mai. 06
Jun. 06
Jul. 06
Aug. 06
Sep. 06
Okt. 06
Nov. 06
Dez. 06
Jan. 07
Feb. 07
Mrz. 07
Apr. 07
Mai. 07
Jun. 07
Jul. 07
Aug. 07
Sep. 07
Okt. 07
Nov. 07
Dez. 07
Jan. 08
Feb. 08
Mrz. 08
Apr. 08
Mai. 08
Jun. 08
Jul. 08
Aug. 08
Sep. 08
Okt. 08
Nov. 08
Dez. 08
Jan. 09
Feb. 09
Mrz. 09
Apr. 09
Mai. 09
Jun. 09
-5
Decoupled payments f. goverment
Dairy farm income
Dairy farm income + decoupled payments
Family living requirements*
200
Dairy farm income
Family living requirements*
0
Jan. 06
Feb. 06
Mrz. 06
Apr. 06
Mai. 06
Jun. 06
Jul. 06
Aug. 06
Sep. 06
Okt. 06
Nov. 06
Dez. 06
Jan. 07
Feb. 07
Mrz. 07
Apr. 07
Mai. 07
Jun. 07
Jul. 07
Aug. 07
Sep. 07
Okt. 07
Nov. 07
Dez. 07
Jan. 08
Feb. 08
Mrz. 08
Apr. 08
Mai. 08
Jun. 08
Jul. 08
Aug. 08
Sep. 08
Okt. 08
Nov. 08
Dez. 08
Jan. 09
Feb. 09
Mrz. 09
Apr. 09
Mai. 09
Jun. 09
Index: Dairy income vs. Family living needs
260
240
Index family living requirements = 100
Index family living requirements = 100
220
200
180
160
140
120
100
80
60
260
240
Indeed, as the UN Special Rapporteur on the
220
200
Right to Food, Olivier de Schutter, has recently
180
noted, “Without these various forms of support,
160
the EU producers would not be in a position to
compete on world markets, since the social and
140
environmental conditions under which they ope-
120
111
rate would not allow them to be competitive”.
100
80
Currently, many European dairy farmers are in-
60
curring losses. In December 2010, for example,
40
40
Dairy farm income + decoupled payments
During
Dairy farm income
scandal, when consump-
the melamine
the UK National Farmers’ Union claimed there
20
20
Family living requirements*
Family living requirements*
tion of imported milkpowder was low, farmers in
was a gap between the price paid for milk and
0
0
Bangladesh had an income well above living re-
the costs of producing it of some £ 330 million
quirements. At other times the price was around
(€ 389.4 million), with British farmers losing an
Method assumptions
the same level as living requirements
average of 3 pence (€ 0.35)
112
, on every litre of
Calculations done based on the farm economics figures for calender year 2008. To show monthly farm economics for 2006-6/2009 the milk price have been changed proportionally to national milk prices
2006-6/2009. Purchase feed costs have been changed proportionally to
This poor financial
All other cost and returns have been adjusted by inflation.
or even below.
milk they produced.
national feed prices 2006-6/2009.
situation
Jan. 06
Feb. 06
Mrz. 06
Apr. 06
Mai. 06
Jun. 06
Jul. 06
Aug. 06
Sep. 06
Okt. 06
Nov. 06
Dez. 06
Jan. 07
Feb. 07
Mrz. 07
Apr. 07
Mai. 07
Jun. 07
Jul. 07
Aug. 07
Sep. 07
Okt. 07
Nov. 07
Dez. 07
Jan. 08
Feb. 08
Mrz. 08
Apr. 08
Mai. 08
Jun. 08
Jul. 08
Aug. 08
Sep. 08
Okt. 08
Nov. 08
Dez. 08
Jan. 09
Feb. 09
Mrz. 09
Apr. 09
Mai. 09
Jun. 09
* Familiy living requirments: Share of dairy farm income on household income multiplied with basic family living requirements. Example: DE-31: 90% * 33000 Euro/year), Bd-2: 16%* 50.000 BDT/year)
is attributed to ”the huge increase in feed and
bedding costs” and the absence of a ”fair” milk
price.
113
Jan. 06
Feb. 06
Mrz. 06
Apr. 06
Mai. 06
Jun. 06
Jul. 06
Aug. 06
Sep. 06
Okt. 06
Nov. 06
Dez. 06
Jan. 07
Feb. 07
Mrz. 07
Apr. 07
Mai. 07
Jun. 07
Jul. 07
Aug. 07
Sep. 07
Okt. 07
Nov. 07
Dez. 07
Jan. 08
Feb. 08
Mrz. 08
Apr. 08
Mai. 08
Jun. 08
Jul. 08
Aug. 08
Sep. 08
Okt. 08
Nov. 08
Dez. 08
Jan. 09
Feb. 09
Mrz. 09
Apr. 09
Mai. 09
Jun. 09
Jan. 06
Feb. 06
Mrz. 06
Apr. 06
Mai. 06
Jun. 06
Jul. 06
Aug. 06
Sep. 06
Okt. 06
Nov. 06
Dez. 06
Jan. 07
Feb. 07
Mrz. 07
Apr. 07
Mai. 07
Jun. 07
Jul. 07
Aug. 07
Sep. 07
Okt. 07
Nov. 07
Dez. 07
Jan. 08
Feb. 08
Mrz. 08
Apr. 08
Mai. 08
Jun. 08
Jul. 08
Aug. 08
Sep. 08
Okt. 08
Nov. 08
Dez. 08
Jan. 09
Feb. 09
Mrz. 09
Apr. 09
Mai. 09
Jun. 09
Income from dairy farming
Index: Dairy income vs. Family living needs
The graph above covering a three-and-a-half
year period show that only for a few short
months did the EU dairy farmers receive an
income above their living requirements without
need for a subsidy. For the rest of the time,
farmers’ incomes were only above living re-
quirements thanks to decoupled subsidies. This
clearly shows that the EU farmers are for the
most part selling below production costs.
According to Agritrade, it is precisely the EU’s
direct aid payments – which currently amount to
3.4 euro cents per litre of milk produced - which
11
PDF to HTML - Convert PDF files to HTML files
1039088_0010.png
18 Milking the poor - How EU subsidies hurt dairy producers in Bangladesh
19 Milking the poor - How EU subsidies hurt dairy producers in Bangladesh
Bangladesh is also one of the main recipients
of Danish development aid. In 2010, the Danish
International Development Agency (DANIDA)
spent DKK 471 million (€ 63 million) in Bangla-
desh.
119
Agriculture is one of DANIDA’s priority
areas, and agricultural development is identified
as essential for poverty reduction in Bangladesh.
In the 1970s, DANIDA supported the establish-
ment of the Bangladesh Milk Producers Co-ope-
rative Union Limited (BMPCUL) which produces
milk under the trade name Milk Vita.
120
DANIDA correctly notes that increasing agri-
cultural production and income improves food
security, reduces vulnerability of farming house-
holds and reduces malnutrition and mortality
amongst children.
121
In 2004, before decoupling
of subsidies, Carsten Staur, Chief of DANIDA
stated: “It is clearly a problem that agricultural
subsidies are contributing to maintain a produc-
tion in the world, which is not appropriate on the
basis of an idea of the global division of labour.
We are maintaining a production in Europe,
which is not competitive.”
122
EU milk powder imports also undermine aid
directed specifically to Bangladeshi milk powder
producers. It was announced in June 2011 that
the International Finance Corporation (IFC), the
private sector lending arm of the World Bank, is
providing a € 5.3 million loan to PRAN Group –
the largest food processing company in Bangla-
desh - to expand its local dairy procurement and
processing capacity.
The IFC says this will help increase the incomes
of about 17,000 Bangladeshi dairy farmers and
contribute to the country’s food security. It also
notes that “Bangladesh has one of the lowest
per capita milk consumption levels in the world
and imports milk powder to meet 15 per cent
of its dairy demand”. IFC’s investment will help
PRAN raise processing capacity across its
product range, including ultra-heat-treated milk,
pasteurised milk, and milk powder, and increase
raw milk procurement from local dairy farmers.
“PRAN’s expansion will help increase the local
supply of value-added dairy products, contribu-
ting to food security in Bangladesh,” said an IFC
spokesperson.
123
In the 2005 “European Consensus on De-
velopment”, the issue of Policy Coherence for
Development was identified by the EU as a
pioneering concept for achieving the Millennium
Development Goals. The EU has committed
itself to ensuring that its various policies do not
undermine social and economic progress in
developing countries. Article 208 of the 2009
Lisbon Treaty states that: “Union development
cooperation policy shall have as its primary
objective the reduction and, in the long term, the
eradication of poverty. The union shall take ac-
count of the objectives of development coopera-
tion in the policies that it implements which are
likely to affect developing countries.”
In the spring of 2010, the EC conducted a
public hearing online, and in the Commis-
sion’s summary, it states: “The EU should avoid
damaging the economies or food production
capacities of developing countries.”
124
However,
in the Commission’s communication on the CAP
post-2013, published in November 2010, no
reference is made to the effect of the CAP on
developing countries, except in the context of
food security, where it is stated that EU agricul-
ture should contribute to world food demand by
maintaining and improving production capacity,
while respecting EU commitments in interna-
tional trade and Policy Coherence for Develop-
ment.
125
As this report shows, it is precisely
the high production level that has a damaging
effect on agricultural development in developing
countries.
are sustaining UK milk farmers in business,
despite the losses they are incurring.
115
Agritrade notes:
“In the absence of direct aid payments, it is
likely that a significant number of EU dairy
farmers who currently face losses on the market
price received for their milk would review their
ongoing engagement in dairy production. This
would not be immediate, but would occur when
reinvestment decisions need to be taken, and
would be likely to reduce overall levels of EU
milk production. Given that around 5 per cent
of EU dairy production is exported, even a small
reduction in overall EU milk production would
carry important implications. This is particularly
the case for lower-value dairy products, such as
skimmed milk powder. With more EU milk being
used for higher-value products, production of
skimmed milk powder and other bulk dairy com-
modities would be likely to decline most dra-
matically. There have been numerous reports of
EU exports of milk powder undermining efforts
to promote local dairy production to meet local
market needs in Africa, particularly in West and
Central Africa.”
116
Giving with one hand, taking with
another: The EU’s incoherence
The EU and Denmark are supporting Bangla-
desh through aid while simultaneously under-
mining it through trade policy. While EU milk
powder imports are harming Bangladeshi dairy
farmers, the EC is, for example, funding a Natio-
nal Food Policy Capacity Strengthening Pro-
gramme (to the tune of € 3.3 million
117
) helping
the Bangladeshi government promote a national
food policy.
118
PDF to HTML - Convert PDF files to HTML files
1039088_0011.png
20 Milking the poor - How EU subsidies hurt dairy producers in Bangladesh
21 Milking the poor - How EU subsidies hurt dairy producers in Bangladesh
Denmark’s milk production
The farmers that own and deliver milk to Arla
Foods are direct beneficiaries of EU subsidies
under the CAP. The following Table 2 shows
an example of a typical Danish dairy farmer
receiving over DKK 330,000 (€ 44,295) a year
in subsidies. Some farmers, however, receive as
much as € 500,000.
126
This is not the sum total of EU support to
Danish dairy farmers. The dairy sector is
supported through a range of other measures,
such as a premium for male animals (of DKK
735-1174 (€ 99-158)) depending on the age
when slaughtered and whether the animal is
steered),
128
support for school milk schemes,
support for storing of butter and aid for the
disposal of skimmed milk.
129
Our analysis in the previous section suggested
that although subsidies have been decoupled
from production, they enable otherwise loss-
making EU milk producers to stay in business.
Below, we calculate the costs and cost-
effectiveness of Danish dairy farmers.
130
Table
3 shows that, without subsidies, Danish dairy
farming was unprofitable for both large (+200
cows) and small (0-100 cows) farms in 2009.
The value of production covered only 88 per
cent of costs for small farms. In 2008 only large
farms were profitable, and only by a margin of 4
per cent of costs.
Moreover, as Denmark is the country with
highest yield per cow in the EU and Danish farms
are bigger than in most other EU countries
131
,
many farmers in other countries are also likely to
mean even more farmers would be loss-making.
Thus EU subsidies that enable these otherwise
loss-making dairy farmers to continue exporting
in ways that undermine many milk producers in
poorer parts of the world.
Cost effectiveness of dairy production, 2008 and 2009
132
2008
Milk production, kg per cow
Value of milk production
Value of manure
Total costs
Net profit
Returns in per cent of costs
Small farms
8,114
DKK per cow
20336
56
22342
-1950
91.3
Large farms
8,775
DKK per cow
21992
132
21179
945
104.5
All farms
8,659
DKK per cow
21702
88
21878
-88
99.6
2009
(Detailed presentation of cost for 2009 is provided in annex A on page 21)
Small farms
Large farms
Milk production, kg per cow
7,956
8,979
DKK per cow
DKK per cow
Value of milk production
17150
19355
Value of manure
256
252
Total costs
19682
20166
Net profit
-2276
-559
Returns in per cent of costs
88.4
97.2
All farms
8,810
DKK per cow
18991
213
20195
-991
95.1
Danish farmers and subsidies
133
Example of subsidies to a milk producer with milk production of 500 tons, 92 hectares of tilled
fields, 8 hectares of fallow land and 8 hectares of permanent grazing fields
127
Type of area with
payment entitlement
Area in ha Base rate per
payment entitle-
ment (DKK)
92
8
8
2300
2300
500
Milk addition per
payment entitle-
ment 2006 (DKK)
965
0
965
Total subsidies per
payment entitle-
ment 2006 (DKK)
3265
2300
1465
Subsidies
granted
in 2006 (DKK)
300380
18400
11720
DKK330500
(€44362)
The Danish dairy farmer Niels Kristian Jørgensen has 230 cows. He receives DKK 739,000
(€ 99,195) in EU subsidies, and says that the price he gets for his produce does not cover
his costs. He explains that, without the subsidies, consumers would pay three times the
current price for one litre of milk. When asked if he could keep farming if the subsidies were
abolished, he answers: “Not unless the prices go up significantly and the costs are kept
steady - and I consider this a utopia!”
Henning Skov Andersen runs a farm with 95 cows and 85 hectares. He says that with the
high costs of production in Denmark, the DKK 300,000 (€ 40,268) he receives in subsidies
are needed to make ends meet. Without the subsidies, he would have a deficit every year,
and in the end he would need to close down the farm.
Michael Kristensen, with 160 cows and 140 hectares, receives subsidies worth DKK
480,000 (€ 64,430) every year, and says he could not keep farming without them. He thinks
that the farm subsidies should have never been introduced in the first place.
Tilled fields
Fallow land
Permanent grazing fields
Total
PDF to HTML - Convert PDF files to HTML files
1039088_0012.png
22 Milking the poor - How EU subsidies hurt dairy producers in Bangladesh
23 Milking the poor - How EU subsidies hurt dairy producers in Bangladesh
Conclusion
For decades, European dairy farmers have been
given massive subsidies under the EU’s CAP.
This has enabled them to export cheap milk
powder, among other products, on international
markets at low prices. In 2005, however, the EU
decided to change the nature of those subsidies
by ‘decoupling’ them from the production levels
of farmers. However, this report shows that the
EU’s decoupled subsidies are continuing to
damage dairy farmers in Bangladesh, where mil-
lions of poor people support their low incomes
through milk
production.
At the root of the problem of cheap milk powder
imports in Bangladesh are the massive subsi-
dies given to European dairy farmers. European
and Danish taxpayers are continuing to fund
EU farmers to harm the livelihoods of poor dairy
farmers in Bangladesh, at the same time as
funding aid programmes designed to help them.
Whilst the EU has committed itself to promoting
Policy Coherence for Development - ensuring
that its various policies do not undermine social
and economic progress in developing countries
- this aim is being undermined by cases such as
the one illustrated in this report.
The EU is preparing a comprehensive reform of
the CAP, which is expected to come into force in
2014. Much of the negotiations will take place in
early 2012, when Denmark will be hold the pre-
sidency of the EU. This represents an important
political opportunity to reform the CAP in a way
that ends all damaging subsidies and will be
a test of the EU’s willingness to ensure that its
policies are coherently promoting development
in poor countries.
Annex
Annex A
Costs of production, Danish dairy farmers, 2009
Costs of milk production
( DKK per cow)
Operating (variable) costs
Insemination
Feed
Veterinary and medicine
Other operating costs
Machinery costs
Energy
Interest on operating inputs
Partially variable costs
Hired and opportunity costs of labour
Maintenance of equipment
Depreciation of equipment
Interest on equipment
Fixed costs
Real estate tax and energy levy
Insurance
Maintenance and depreciation, buildings
Interest on buildings
Other fixed costs
Total costs
2009
Small farms
11544
258
8295
696
731
689
464
410
5914
4068
820
793
234
2224
54
133
738
956
344
19682
2009
Large farms
11982
293
8572
664
937
618
484
414
5309
2753
850
1294
412
2875
62
109
1069
1363
273
20166
2009
All farms
12012
285
8542
712
907
660
486
421
5493
3105
855
1166
367
2690
61
117
962
1250
300
20195
PDF to HTML - Convert PDF files to HTML files
1039088_0013.png
24 Milking the poor - How EU subsidies hurt dairy producers in Bangladesh
25 Milking the poor - How EU subsidies hurt dairy producers in Bangladesh
Endnotes
1
Interview by Danwatch, June 2011
2
2002. ‘Milking the CAP: How Europe’s Dairy Regime is Devastating
Livelihoods in the Developing World’. Oxfam Briefing Paper, 34.
Available at: http://www.oxfam.org.uk/resources/policy/trade/downloads/
bp34_cap.pdf, p. 16.
3
Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights.
2011. The Common Agricultural Policy towards 2020: The Role of the
European Union in Supporting the Realization of the Right to Food,
Comments and Recommendations by the United Nations Special Rap-
porteur on the Right to Food, 17 June, p.1.
4
Hemme, T. & Otte, J.. 2010. Status and Prospects for Smallholder Milk
Production: A Global Perspective. Rome: FAO, p.6.; Trinity College Dublin.
2010. ‘EU dairy policy reform and developing countries’. Available at:
http://www.tcd.ie/iiis/policycoherence/eu-agricultural-policy-reform/dairy-
case-study.php.
5
Siddiquee, N.A. & Southwood, R. 2011. ’Strengthening the dairy Value
Chain in Bangladesh’. Slideshow presented at the Gender and Market
Oriented Agriculture (AgriGender 2011) Workshop, Addis Ababa, Ethiopia,
31 January–2 February. Available at: http://www.slideshare.net/ILRI/
strengthening-the-dairy-value-chain-in-bangladesh-changing-lives-for-
dairy-farmers.
6
CARE. n.d. ‘Strengthening the Dairy Value Chain Project: Bangladesh’.
Available at: http://edu.care.org.
7
CARE. n.d. ‘Strengthening the Dairy Value Chain Project: Bangladesh’.
Available at: http://edu.care.org.
8
FAO. n.d. Bangladesh Country Profile. Accessed: 28/07/11.
9
http://www.ruralpovertyportal.org/web/guest/country/home/tags/bang-
ladesh
10
Embassy of Denmark, Bangladesh, http://www.ambdhaka.um.dk/en/
menu/DevelopmentIssues/Businesstobusiness%28B2B%29Programme/
B2B+Bangladesh+as+a+Partner+Country/Economic+Overview; available
at: https://www.cia.gov/library/publications/the-world-factbook/geos/
bg.html.
11
International Farm Comparison Network. 2009. Dairy Policy Impacts
on Bangladesh & EU 15 Dairy Farmers’ Livelihoods, p.2, 5; CARE Bang-
ladesh. 2008. ‘Pro-Poor Analysis of the Dairy Value Chain’, p. 20; Dairy
farming provides an average of around 16 per cent of family income, the
rest provided by other farming activity and off-farm income.
12
International Farm Comparison Network. 2009. Dairy Policy Impacts
on Bangladesh & EU 15 Dairy Farmers’ Livelihoods, p.2.
13
Siddiquee, N.A. & and Southwood, R. 2011. ’Strengthening the dairy
Value Chain in Bangladesh’. Slideshow presented at the Gender and
Market Oriented Agriculture (AgriGender 2011) Workshop, Addis Ababa,
Ethiopia, 31 January–2 February. Available at: http://www.slideshare.net/
ILRI/strengthening-the-dairy-value-chain-in-bangladesh-changing-lives-
for-dairy-farmers.
14
Haque, S.A. 2007. Lessons Learned Study: Bangladesh – Smallholder
Milk Producers, Nutrition, Incomes, Jobs. Rome: FAO, p.13.
15
Shamsuddin, M. et al. 2006. ‘A Survey to Identify Economic Opportu-
nities for Smallholder Dairy Farms in Bangladesh’. Journal of Tropical Ani-
mal Health and Production, 38(2), p. 131-140.; The livestock sub-sector
contributes only 3 per cent of Bangladesh’s GDP but provides employ-
ment to around 20 per cent of the rural population by some estimates,
and is one of the most important economic activities in the country;
PRAN-RFL Group. 2007. Report on the Development of Dairy Industry in
Bangladesh, p.2.
16
Hemme, T. & Otte, J. 2010. Status and Prospects for Smallholder Milk
Production: A Global Perspective. Rome: FAO, p. 6-7.
17
Trinity College Dublin. 2010. ‘EU dairy policy reform and developing
countries’. Available at: http://www.tcd.ie/iiis/policycoherence/eu-agricul-
tural-policy-reform/dairy-case-study.php.
18
International Farm Comparison Network. 2009. Dairy Policy Impacts
on Bangladesh & EU 15 Dairy Farmers’ Livelihoods, p. 2, 4.; A 2004 study
found that dairy farms costs in Bangladesh were around 20 per cent lower
than the costs of production in the EU. Hemme, T. et al. ‘A Review of Milk
production in Bangladesh with Particular Emphasis on Small-Scale Pro-
ducers’. PPLPI Working Paper No.7. Kiel: International Farm Comparison
Network (IFCN), p. 3.
19
Hannan, M.M. et al. 2010. ‘Household demand for dairy products in
Bangladesh: An Application of AIDS Model’. Journal of Bangladesh Agri-
cultural University, 8 (1), p. 121–6.
20
FAO/IDF. 2003. Dairy Development Newsletter. August, Issue no. 7.
Available at: http://www.fao.org/ag/againfo/themes/en/dairy/documents/
newsletters/newsletter-7-English.pdf.
21
‘Dairy industry seeks greater policy support’, Independent (Bangla-
desh), 20 June 2011.
22
Katherine Barker and Michael Hinsch, ‘Tetra Pak in Bangladesh: Part-
nering to Improve Nutrition and Develop the Dairy Industry’, undated
23
‘Dairy industry seeks greater policy support’, Independent (Bangla-
desh), 20 June 2011
24
Hemme,T. et al. 2002. ‘A Review of Milk Production in Bangladesh
with Particular Emphasis on Small-scale Producers’. Available at: http://
www.fao.org/ag/againfo/programmes/en/pplpi/docarc/execsumm_wp07.
pdf.
25
Hemme, T. Et al. 2009, ‘Dairy Policy Impacts on Bangladesh & EU 15
dairy farmers’ livelihoods: Dairy Case Study’. Kiel: IFCN.
26
Hemme,T. et al. 2002. ‘A Review of Milk Production in Bangladesh
with Particular Emphasis on Small-scale Producers’. Available at: http://
www.fao.org/ag/againfo/programmes/en/pplpi/docarc/execsumm_wp07.
pdf.
27
CARE Bangladesh.2008. ‘Pro-Poor Analysis of the Dairy Value Chain’,
p.18.
28
Ministry of Finance. 2010. ‘Bangladesh Economic Review, 2009’.
Dhaka: Government of Bangladesh.
29
Government of Bangladesh. 2009. ’Steps Towards Change’, p.32.
Available at: http://www.lcgbangladesh.org/prsp/docs/PRS%20Bangla-
desh%202010%20final.pdf.
30
Ministry of Fisheries and Livestock Government. 2005. ’Livestock
Policy And Action Plan’. Dhaka: Government of Bangladesh.
31
Government of Bangladesh. 2009. ’Steps Towards Change’, p.29.
Available at: http://www.lcgbangladesh.org/prsp/docs/PRS%20Bangla-
desh%202010%20final.pdf.
32
Bhuiyan, E.R. ‘US$150 million for milk powder import’, Financial Ex-
press, 18 February 2010.
33
CARE. n.d. ‘Strengthening the Dairy Value Chain Project: Bangladesh’.
Available at: http://edu.care.org.
34
IFCN. 2009. Dairy Policy Impacts on Bangladesh & EU 15 Dairy Far-
mers’ Livelihoods, p. 2.
35
CARE. n.d. ‘Strengthening the Dairy Value Chain Project: Bangladesh’.
Available at: http://edu.care.org.
36
Hemme, T. Et al. 2009, ‘Dairy Policy Impacts on Bangladesh & EU 15
dairy farmers’ livelihoods: Dairy Case Study’. Kiel: IFCN.
37
Parvez, S. & Jibon, G.M. ‘Dairy farmers hurt by low-cost milk powder’,
Daily Star, 15 May 2009.
38
‘Bangladesh dairy farmers spill milk in price protest’, Reuters, 12 April
2009.
39
Ibid.
40
Hemme, T. Et al. 2009, ‘Dairy Policy Impacts on Bangladesh & EU 15
dairy farmers’ livelihoods: Dairy Case Study’. Kiel: IFCN.
41
Interview by local researcher in Bangladesh hired by Danwatch, 8 June
2011.
42
Parvez, S. & and Jibon, G.M, ‘Dairy farmers hurt by low-cost milk
powder’, Daily Star, 15 May 2009.
43
Trinity College Dublin. 2010. ‘EU dairy policy reform and developing
countries’. Available at: http://www.tcd.ie/iiis/policycoherence/eu-agricul-
tural-policy-reform/dairy-case-study.php.
44
Agritrade. 2011.‘USDA review of EU dairy sector development’,
Agritrade News Update, July, http://agritrade.cta.int/en/Commodities/
Dairy-sector
45
Agritrade. 2011. ‘Farm-gate milk prices lag behind rising dairy com-
modity prices’, Agritrade News Update, May. Available at: http://agritrade.
cta.int/en/Commodities/Dairy-sector.
46
The EU has made special trade and development agreements with the
ACP states through the Lomé Conventions and the Cotonou Agreement.
47
Agritrade. 2011. ‘Farm-gate milk prices lag behind rising dairy com-
modity prices’, Agritrade News Update, July. Available at: http://agritrade.
cta.int/en/Commodities/Dairy-sector.
48
See, for example: Green, D. & Griffith, M. 2002. Dumping on the Poor:
The Common Agricultural Policy, the WTO and International Development.
Cambridge: Catholic Fund for Overseas Development (CAFOD).; Oxfam.
2002. ‘Milking the CAP: How Europe’s Dairy Regime is Devastating Live-
lihoods in the Developing World’. Oxfam Briefing Paper, 34. Available at:
http://www.oxfam.org.uk/resources/policy/trade/downloads/bp34_cap.
pdf.
49
FAO. 2009. ‘Smallholder dairy development: Lessons learned in Asia’.
Bangkok: FAO Regional Office for Asia and The Pacific. Available at: ftp://
ftp.fao.org/docrep/fao/011/i0588e/i0588e00.pdf.
50
Haque, S.A. 2007. Lessons Learned Study: Bangladesh – Smallholder
Milk Producers, Nutrition, Incomes, Jobs. Rome: FAO.
51
Price checks in Bangladeshi supermarkets in May and July 2011.
52
100 litre whole milk equals 13 kg whole milk powder: Pearce, K.N.
”Milk Powder”. Food Science Section, New Zealand Dairy Research Insti-
tute. Available at: http://www.nzic.org.nz/ChemProcesses/dairy/3C.pdf.
53
Government of Bangladesh. 2010, ‘BUDGET 2010-11, Ministry of
Finance, Budget Speech’ by Abul Maal Abdul Muhith, Minister of Finance;
‘Bangladesh dairy farmers spill milk in price protest’, Reuters, 12 April
2009.
54
‘Govt urged not to cut tariff on milk powder import’, Daily Star, 19 June
2010. Available at: http://www.thedailystar.net/story.php?nid=143261.;
‘Dairy Farm Owners’ Assoc opposes budget proposal’, Financial Express,
20 June 2010. Available at: http://www.thefinancialexpress-bd.com/more.
php?news_id=103607.
55
PRAN-RFL Group. 2007. Report on the Development of Dairy Industry
in Bangladesh. Available at: http://www.undp.org.bd/library/policypapers/
Dev%20of%20Dairy%20Indus(English).pdf, p.6.
56
PRAN-RFL Group. 2007. Report on the Development of Dairy Industry
in Bangladesh. Available at: http://www.undp.org.bd/library/policypapers/
Dev%20of%20Dairy%20Indus(English).pdf, p.2, 6.
57
‘Dairy industry seeks greater policy support’, Independent (Bangla-
desh), 20 June 2011.
58
Statistics Denmark. http://www.statistikbanken.dk, Search on Rev4-
SITC: 02222; ‘Dano sales are booming in Bangladesh’. Arla Press
Release, 29 June 2007. Available at: http://www.arla.com/press/archive/
dano-sales-are-booming-in-bangladesh/.
59
Our calculations for 2008 is based on Statistics Denmark (http://www.
statistikbanken.dk, Search on Rev4- SITC: 02222) and FAOSTAT.; Merrett,
N. ‘Bangladesh success reflects Arla’s Asian ambition’, Dairy Reporter,
3 July 2007; ‘Bangladesh ponders production: the Bangladeshi dairy
community is awaiting investment in domestic milk supply in order to
expand production’, Dairy Industries International, 1 January 2008.
60
‘Arla opens packing plant in Bangladesh ‘. Arla Press Release. 23
December, 2004. Available at: http://www.arla.com/press/archive/arla-
opens-packing-plant-in-bangladesh/.
61
Figures from Statistics Denmark.
62
http://farmsubsidy.org.
63
‘Dano sales are booming in Bangladesh’. Arla Press Release, 29 June
2007. Available at: http://www.arla.com/press/archive/dano-sales-are-
booming-in-bangladesh/.
64
Not for industrial use
65
Correspondence with Arla Foods, 16 June 2011
66
‘Mælkepulver mere værd end Klovborgost’, Landbrugsavisen, 11
March 2011
67
‘Mælkekonserves’, Landbrug og Fødevarer, 2010, http://www.
lf.dk/~/media/lf/Talper cent20ogper cent20analyser/Aarsstatistikker/
Mejeristatistik/2009/7per cent20maelkekonserves.ashx
68
‘New Milk Powder Factory in Vimmerby, Sweden’, Arla website acces-
sed 1st August 2011
69
Arla Foods, Annual Report 2010, p.6
70
http://www.arla.com/about-us/our-company/
71
http://www.arla.com/our-responsibility/our-responsibility1/arla-and-
global-compact/
72
http://www.arla.com/our-responsibility/our-responsibility1/preface/
73
Arla Foods. 2009. ‘Our Responsibility - Arla Foods’ corporate social
responsibility - Code of conduct’, p.22, 23, 25. Available at: http://www.
arla.com/Upload/Arla%20COM/Sustainability/CoC_UK.pdf.
74
Arla Foods. 2009. ‘Our Responsibility - Arla Foods’ corporate social
responsibility - Code of conduct’, p.32-33. Available at: http://www.arla.
com/Upload/Arla%20COM/Sustainability/CoC_UK.pdf.
75
Haque, S.A. 2007. Lessons Learned Study: Bangladesh – Smallholder
Milk Producers, Nutrition, Incomes, Jobs. Rome: FAO, p. 13.
76
Arla Foods. 2009. ‘Our Responsibility - Arla Foods’ corporate social
responsibility - Code of conduct’, p.32-33. Available at: http://www.arla.
com/Upload/Arla%20COM/Sustainability/CoC_UK.pdf.
77
Agritrade. 2011. ‘USDA review of EU dairy sector development’,
Agritrade News Update, July. Available at: http://agritrade.cta.int/en/Com-
modities/Dairy-sector.
78
European Court of Auditors. 2009. ‘Have the Management Instruments
Applied to the Market in Milk and Milk products Achieved Their Main
Objectives?’. Special Report No.14, para II.
79
Trinity College Dublin. 2010. ‘EU dairy policy reform and developing
countries’. Available at: http://www.tcd.ie/iiis/policycoherence/eu-agricul-
tural-policy-reform/dairy-case-study.php.
80
IFCN. 2009. Dairy Policy Impacts on Bangladesh & EU 15 Dairy Far-
mers’ Livelihoods, p. 3.
PDF to HTML - Convert PDF files to HTML files
1039088_0014.png
26 Milking the poor - How EU subsidies hurt dairy producers in Bangladesh
27 Milking the poor - How EU subsidies hurt dairy producers in Bangladesh
81
Merrett, N. ‘EU export subsidies revoked as dairy prices rocket’, The
Dairy Reporter, 18 June 2007; Chaffin, J. ‘EU revives dairy export subsi-
dies’, Financial Times, 16 January 2009.
82
Palmer, D. ‘EU subsidies a threat to Aussie dairy: Opposition’, Austra-
lian Food News, 30 January 2009. Available at: http://www.ausfoodnews.
com.au/2009/01/30/eu-subsidies-a-threat-to-aussie-dairy-opposition.
html.
83
EU Budget 2011. Available at: http://ec.europa.eu/budget/figu-
res/011/2011_en.cfm.
84 Civitas Institute for the Study of Civil Societies. 2010. ‘Common Agri-
cultural Policy’. Available at: http://www.civitas.org.uk/eufacts/download/
AG.3.CAP.pdf.
85
See www.farmsubsidy.org; Jack Thurston, ‘ EU boots farm subsidy
millionaires by more than 20 per cent in 2009’, http://capreform.eu/2009-
data-harvest/; Heather Stewart, ‘Who’s creaming off EU subsidies?’,
Observer, 21 May 2006
86
United States Department of Agriculture (USDA) Foreign Agricultural
Service. http://www.fas.usda.gov/psdonline/psdQuery.aspx search on
exports of ’Dairy, Dry Whole Milk Powder’.
87
USDA Foreign Agricultural Service. 2010. ’Cows Milk Production and
Consumption: Summary For Selected Countries’.
88
European Court of Auditors. 2009. ‘Have the Management Instruments
Applied to the Market in Milk and Milk products Achieved Their Main
Objectives?’. Special Report No.14, para 38.
89
European Court of Auditors. 2009. ‘Have the Management Instruments
Applied to the Market in Milk and Milk products Achieved Their Main
Objectives?’. Special Report No.14, para 1.
90
EC. 2010. Report from the Commission to the European Parliament
and the Council: Third Financial report on the European Agricultural Gua-
rantee Fund 2009 Financial year. Available at: http://eur-lex.europa.eu/
LexUriServ/LexUriServ.do?uri=COM:2010:0502:FIN:EN:PDF.
91
Danish Ministry of Food, Agriculture and Fisheries, personal communi-
cation, 4 April 2011.
92
Calculated as DKK 0.015 per litre milk (according to Danish Ministry of
Food, Agriculture and Fisheries, Correspondence, 4 April 2011), multiplied
with an estimation of Arla Foods’ processed Danish milk calculated in the
quota year 09/10 as: ¾ of the 4253 mill. litres milk received from Danish
farmers in 2009 and ¼ of the 4345 mill. kg milk received from Danish
farmers in 2010 (according to Arla Foods’ financial report 2009)
93
Statistics Denmark, search on rev5 sitc 02222.
94
DKK 2.60/kg of milk powder according to Arla Foods; http://www.arla.
dk/da/Arla-Forum/Spoergsmaal-svar/Arla-Foods/Virksomheden/Arlas-
handelssamarbejde-med-U-lande/. Converted to US dollars at the 2009
rate of 5.36 DKK/$.
95
Waite, R. 2011. ’CAP Reform across Europe – A view from the Euro-
pean Commission’ Available at: http://www.eblex.org.uk/documents/con-
tent/publications/nc_roger_waite_eu_commission_view_of_cap-2011_04.
pdf.
96
See von Witzke, H. et al. 2010. ‘Decoupled Payments to EU Farmers,
Production and Trade: An Economic Analysis for Germany’, Humboldt
University Berlin Working Paper, Number 90/2010, which reviews other
studies and conducts its own analysis.
97
De Økonomiske Råd. 2010. ’Økonomi og Miljø (Economy and Environ-
ment)’, p. 465. Available at:
http://www.dors.dk/graphics/Synkron-Library/Publikationer/Rapporter/
Milj%F8_2010/Milj%F8%202010/Hele%20pub.pdf.
98
CARE Bangladesh. 2008. ‘Pro-Poor Analysis of the Dairy Value Chain’,
p. 20.
99
ICSTD. 2007. ‘Agricultural subsidies in the WTO ’Green Box: An
overview of the key issues from a sustainable development viewpoint’.
Available at: http://ictsd.org/downloads/2008/07/a1.pdf.
100
von Witzke, H. et al. 2010. ‘Decoupled Payments to EU Farmers,
Production and Trade: An Economic Analysis for Germany’. Humboldt
University Berlin Working Paper, Number 90/2010, p. 18.
101
International Centre for Trade and Sustainable Development (ICTSD).
2009. ‘Agricultural Subsidies in the WTO Green Box: Ensuring Coherence
with Sustainable Development Goals’, Information Note, No.16. Available
at: http://ictsd.net/downloads/2009/10/green-box-web-1.pdf.
102
See von Witzke, H. et al. 2010. ‘Decoupled Payments to EU Farmers,
Production and Trade: An Economic Analysis for Germany’. Humboldt
University Berlin Working Paper, Number 90/2010, p. 22.
103
IFCN. 2009. Dairy Policy Impacts on Bangladesh & EU 15 Dairy
Farmers’ Livelihoods, p.5.; Previous studies, undertaken when the level
of export subsidies was much higher than currently - for example by the
Australian government in 2001 - showed that a halving of EU and US sub-
sidised dairy exports would cause world prices to rise by between 17 and
35 per cent. Oxfam. 2002. ‘Milking the CAP: How Europe’s Dairy Regime
is Devastating Livelihoods in the Developing World’. Oxfam Briefing Paper,
34. Available at: http://www.oxfam.org.uk/resources/policy/trade/down-
loads/bp34_cap.pdf, p. 16.
104
IFCN. 2009. Dairy Policy Impacts on Bangladesh & EU 15 Dairy
Farmers’ Livelihoods, p.5.
105
Agritrade. 2010. ‘Farm-gate milk prices lag behind rising dairy com-
modity prices’, Agritrade News Update, May. Available at: http://agritrade.
cta.int/en/Commodities/Dairy-sector.
106
European Court of Auditors. 2009. ‘Have the Management Instru-
ments Applied to the Market in Milk and Milk products Achieved Their
Main Objectives?’. Special Report No.14, para 71.
107
von Witzke, H. et al. 2010. ‘Decoupled Payments to EU Farmers,
Production and Trade: An Economic Analysis for Germany’. Humboldt
University Berlin Working Paper, Number 90/2010, p. 18.
108
European Court of Auditors. 2009. ‘Have the management instru-
ments applied to the market in milk and milk products achieved their main
objectives?’. Special Report no. 14.
109
Matthews, A. ‘Developing country impacts of the next CAP reform’,
CAP Reform Blog, 5 February 201. Available at: http://capreform.eu/
developing-country-impacts-of-the-next-cap-reform.
110
EC Directorate-General for Agriculture and Rural Development. 2010.
‘EU Farm Economics Overview: Farm Accountancy Data Network 2007’.
Available at; http://ec.europa.eu/agriculture/rica/pdf/report_2007.pdf.
111
Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights.
2011. The Common Agricultural Policy towards 2020: The Role of the
European Union in Supporting the Realization of the Right to Food,
Comments and Recommendations by the United Nations Special Rap-
porteur on the Right to Food, p. 3-4.
112
When nothing else is stated, British pounds are converted to Euro at
the rate of 1,18 GBP/€, calculated based on average of exchange rates
2010 according to OECD Financial Indicators (MEI): Exchange Rates
(http://stats.oecd.org/Index.aspx?DataSetCode=MEI_FIN).
113
Agritrade. 2011. ‘Farm-gate milk prices lag behind rising dairy com-
modity prices’, Agritrade News Update, May. Available at: http://agritrade.
cta.int/en/Commodities/Dairy-sector
114
Hemme, Torsten & Uddin Mohammad Mohi, 2009, ‘Dairy Policy
Impacts on Bangladesh & EU 15 dairy farmers livelihoods: Dairy Case
Study’, International Farm Comparison Network
115
Agritrade. 2011. ‘Farm-gate milk prices lag behind rising dairy com-
modity prices’, Agritrade News Update, May. Available at: http://agritrade.
cta.int/en/Commodities/Dairy-sector
116
Agritrade. 2011. ‘Farm-gate milk prices lag behind rising dairy com-
modity prices’, Agritrade News Update, May. Available at: http://agritrade.
cta.int/en/Commodities/Dairy-sector
117
EU delegation to Bangladesh. n.d. ‘Food security projects’. Available
at: http://www.eudelbangladesh.org/en/projects/foodsecurity_projects.
htm#6.
118
FAO. n.d. Bangladesh Country Profile. Available at: http://www.fao.
org/countries/55528/en/bgd/.; According to the National Food Policy,
increasing production in the livestock and fisheries sub-sectors is conside-
red as one of the important frontiers towards augmenting overall food pro-
duction in the country, ensuring food security as well as foreign exchange
earnings: Ministry of Food and Disaster Management. 2006. ‘National
Food Policy’. Available at: http://www.nfpcsp.org/agridrupal/sites/default/
files/National_Food_Policy_2006_English_Version.pdf.
119
DANIDA. 2011. ’DANIDA Årsberetning 2010’, p. 113. Available
at: http://www.netpublikationer.dk/um/11063/pdf/Danidas_aarsberet-
ning_2010.pdf.
120
Haque, S.A. 2007. Lessons Learned Study: Bangladesh – Smallhol-
der Milk Producers, Nutrition, Incomes, Jobs. Rome: FAO.
121
Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Denmark. 2005. ’BANGLADESH-DEN-
MARK PARTNERSHIP Strategy for development cooperation 2005-2009’.
Copenhagen: Government of Denmark, p.20f. Available at: http://www.
netpublikationer.dk/um/5751/pdf/87-7667-263-8.pdf.
122
Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Denmark. 2004. ’På bistandsområdet er
Danmark ikke en småstat’. Available at: http://www.afghanistan.um.dk/
NR/rdonlyres/AF83FFFB-93BF-422B-8A33-E728FF92FEC0/0/CarstenIn-
terviewdoc.PDF.
123
‘IFC Loan Helps PRAN Group Expand, Contributing to Food Security
in Bangladesh’, IFC Press Release, 22 June 2011. Available at: http://
www.ifc.org/ifcext/media.nsf/content/SelectedPressRelease?OpenDocum
ent&UNID=E1CB9B548A0AB4FC852578B70052A0D9.
124
EC. 2010. ‘The Common Agricultural Policy alter 2013 – Public
debate: Executive Summary of Contributions’, p.4. Available at: http://
ec.europa.eu/agriculture/cap-post-2013/debate/report/executive-summa-
ry_en.pdf.
125
EC. 2010. ‘The CAP towards 2020: Meeting the food, natural resour-
ces and territorial challenges of the future’. Available at: http://ec.europa.
eu/agriculture/cap-post-2013/communication/com2010-672_en.pdf.
126
http://farmsubsidy.org, personal communication, 16 May 2011, Da-
nish dairy farmer Bøje Pedersen received € 588,616 in 2010.
127
Landbrugsrådgivning på Fyn, http://www.fsps.dk/artikler/driftsana-
lyse2003-2004/fire_typer.htm#eksempel. The example is based on 2006
forecasts, and sums are converted from DKK at the 2006 conversion rate
of DKK 5.94 DKK/$1
128
Ministry of Food, Agriculture and Fisheries, 2011. ’245,4 mio. kr. i
handyrpræmier’. Available at: http://ferv.fvm.dk/Default.aspx?ID=17142&
M=News&NewsID=8193.
129
Ministry of Food, Agriculture and Fisheries, personal correspondence,
4 April 2011.
130
These tables are based the model developed in von Witzke, H. et
al. 2010. ‘Decoupled Payments to EU Farmers, Production and Trade:
An Economic Analysis for Germany’, Humboldt University Berlin Working
Paper, Number 90/2010, using figures from Statistics Denmark.
131
EC Directorate-General for Agriculture and Rural Development.
‘Microeconomic Analysis Of EU Agricultural Holdings 2007’; Farm Ac-
countancy Network Database
132
As the European milk price is artificially high, distorted by market sup-
port mechanisms, it is necessary to compare milk production costs with
an estimated world market price. However, fresh milk is not exported in
itself but transformed into different products with varying contents of milk.
Therefore we use a price estimated by OECD – an OECD reference price.
The OECD reference price is a calculation of the ’real’ milk price based on
the value of the milk contents in various traded dairy products. In 2008 the
OECD-price per 100 kg was € 33.6 28.9 converted at 2008-rates to DKK
251; in 2009 € 28.9 converted at 2009-rates to DKK 216; http://www.
oecd.org/dataoecd/32/5/45560751.xls?contentId=45560752
133
Personal interviews, June 2011
PDF to HTML - Convert PDF files to HTML files
1039088_0015.png
ActionAid is a partnership between people in
rich and poor countries, dedicated to ending
poverty and injustice. We work with people all
over the world to fight hunger and disease,
seek justice and education for women, hold
companies and governments accountable, and
cope with emergencies in over 40 countries.
ActionAid Denmark
Faelledvej 12
DK.2200 Copenhagen N
+45 7731 0000
[email protected]
ms.dk