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Agriculture and rural development
News article7 July 2021Directorate-General for Agriculture and Rural Development

Ambitious green farming requirements can lead to higher environmental benefits, study shows

Published today, a new study by the Joint Research Centre (JRC) of the Commission shows how the choices farmers make to adopt voluntary green practices are affected by how much they are already obliged to contribute to the environment.

The behavioural science study finds that the more mandatory requirements placed on farmers, the less likely they are to make additional voluntary contributions. However, if the mandatory requirements are ambitious enough, the positive impact on the environment more than offsets the drop in voluntary actions.

In the EU, farmers receive support to safeguard their activities and promote food security and sustainable farming, through the common agricultural policy (CAP). This includes financial support to farmers who adopt or maintain farming practices that help meet environmental and climate goals.

The JRC study explores the conditions under which farmers are more or less likely to decide to adopt voluntary environmentally friendly farming practices in addition to mandatory ones. For voluntary practices, the higher the level of direct payments farmers receive, the more likely they are to take up such green activities.

Behavioural science is a relatively new approach to understanding agricultural policy in the EU, which has traditionally relied on modelling and other analysis to pre-test the impact of different policy options.  

These new behavioural insights help enhance the knowledge base, which in turn helps design policies that maximise the impact of the payments they receive on the positive contribution of farmers to the environment. For example, in the provisional political agreement on the new CAP, EU Member States are asked to prepare strategic plans to implement the policy over the next five years. Behavioural insights are one tool that can help them do that effectively.

How did we run the behavioural experiment?

To run the experiment, 600 farmers from across three EU countries were split into two groups:

  • Group 1 where the aim was to assess the impact of different levels of mandatory contributions on the voluntary contributions made to the environment, and
  • Group 2, where the aim was to assess the impact of different levels of income through direct payments.

For the first group, farmers were each given a constant income (in the form of tokens) from which they were instructed to contribute either 5, 40 or 90 tokens as a ‘mandatory environmental contribution’. They were then asked how many additional tokens they would voluntarily contribute to the environment, for which they received a 90% compensation.

The farmers obliged to contribute 40 tokens tended to contribute less on a voluntary basis than those obliged to contribute only 5 tokens. But interestingly, their overall contribution ended up about the same.

For those farmers obliged to contribute 90 tokens, their voluntary contribution decreased further, but not at the same magnitude. This suggests that a positive effect on the environment can be achieved by a combination of mandatory and voluntary contributions but also that high mandatory contributions will lead to a higher total contribution to the environment.

In the second group, farmers received 300, 265 or 215 tokens as their ‘income’ and were told that variations were due to changes in their income support payment. They were also then asked how many tokens they would contribute to the environment.  Those starting with more tokens were likely to make higher voluntary contributions, suggesting that when farmers feel they receive high direct payments they are also willing to contribute more to the environment.

Background

On 25 June, the European Parliament and the Council reached a provisional political agreement on the new Common Agricultural Policy introducing a fairer, greener, more animal friendly and flexible CAP.

The new CAP will support the transition towards more sustainable agriculture with increased ambition for climate, environment, and animal welfare. This includes more ambitious minimum requirements that CAP beneficiaries have to comply with to receive financial support – known as ‘conditionality’. For example, on every farm at least 3% of arable land will be dedicated to biodiversity and non-productive elements. In addition, the reformed CAP introduces eco-schemes, a new voluntary instrument that will reward farmers for implementing climate and environmentally-friendly practices (organic farming, agroecology, integrated pest management, etc.) as well as animal welfare improvements.

The JRC provides independent scientific evidence and advice to EU policies, including agricultural policy. In 2015, JRC scientists produced the report ‘(How) can economic experiments inform EU agricultural policy?’, which advocated the use of economic experiments to enrich the sources of evidence available. In 2019, JRC scientists published a paper on the behavioural factors that affect farmers’ adoption of environmentally friendly practices, whose content is included in a Commission background document on modernising and simplifying the CAP.

This latest behavioural experiment adds to this line of work.

Related links

JRC Publications Repository

Common agricultural policy

Future of the common agricultural policy

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