Giles Fraser writes:
The estate agent Carter Jonas established its reputation
running the estates of the Marquess of Lincolnshire. “Some of the biggest
property owners in the country are our loyal clients,” boasts its website.
And,
in a recent poll of these landowning clients, 67% of them said that Britain
should stay in the EU.
So why all this Euro-enthusiasm
in the Tory heartlands and among the landed gentry?
“Should the UK vote to
leave the EU, the CAP subsidies will likely be reduced,” Tim Jones, head of
Carter Jonas’s rural division, explained.
Thank you, Tim, for putting it so
clearly. We understand.
A massive 38% of the entire
2014-20 EU budget is allocated as subsidies for European farmers. It is far and
away the biggest item of euro expenditure, about €50bn a year.
If these
billions were being used to prop up a heavy industry – steel, for example –
then the neoliberals would be up in arms, complaining like mad that if an
industry can’t cope with a free market then it should be left to die.
Creative
destruction, they call it. But, for some reason, when it comes to agriculture,
different rules apply.
Farms are not called “uneconomic” in the same way that
pits and factories are.
So every British household coughs up about
£250 a year and hands it over to the EU, which hands it over to people like the
Duke of Westminster – already worth £7bn himself.
So, too,
Saudi Prince Bandar (he of the dodgy al-Yamamah arms deal), who pocketed £273,905
of EU money for his estate in Oxfordshire.
The common agricultural policy is
socialism for the rich. It’s a mechanism to buttress the aristocracy – who own
a third of the land in this country – from the chill winds of economic
liberalism.
So why are we hearing so little about all of this in the
current debate over Europe?
Because the right doesn’t want to worry its
landowning friends and the left has somehow persuaded itself that the EU is a
progressive force – so it suits no one’s purpose to raise this issue.
Yet it’s
a huge deal.
For the European Union has become a huge and largely
invisible way of redistributing wealth from the poor to the rich,
subsidising lord so-and so’s grouse moor, while redundancies are handed out to
workers at Port Talbot (whose jobs the government can’t help subsidise because
of EU rules).
But even more problematic is the
way our massively subsidised agricultural sector negatively affects farmers in
the developing world.
“Trade not aid” has been David Cameron’s repeated mantra for dealing with poverty in the
developing world.
But not only does the CAP subsidy to European farmers make it
impossible for the unsubsidised African farmer to compete fairly in European
markets, but it also creates situations where food is overproduced in Europe –
remember butter mountains, milk lakes etc.
The last big year of oversupply was 2007, when the EU
amassed over 13m tonnes of cereal, rice, sugar and milk.
This food was then
dumped cheaply on the markets of the developing world, putting poor farmers out
of business.
And this is exactly what state-subsidised Chinese steel has been
doing to us.
We like the idea of the EU being this great big free-trade zone.
But the word “free” here is most misleading. As so often, one person’s freedom
is another’s imprisonment.
The EU operates like one great big cartel – a
mechanism for fixing prices and keeping out competition. Again, it’s the poor
who suffer.
Little wonder, then, the extent
of economic migration. This week, 500 people drowned in the Mediterranean trying to make it
to Europe for a better life.
They weren’t escaping war. They
were escaping poverty, running from places where it is now all but impossible
to make a living off the land.
These poor people drowned in the moat of
Fortress Europe, an economic selfishness zone designed to keep most of us
placidly comfortable and others with wealth and land beyond the dreams of
avarice.
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