225x Filetype PPT File size 0.37 MB Source: www.tcd.ie
Outline • What are concerns about farm income? – The resources/returns square • Measuring farm incomes – Macroeconomic sources – Microeconomic (survey) sources • Assessing farm incomes in Ireland – Farm household living standards – Are farmers poor? – What about returns to farming? • Distribution of support to farming Farm income concerns • Income adequacy – are farmers poor? • Income parity – do farmers earn less than the going rate on the resources they employ? • Income stability – are farm incomes particularly volatile? Parity-- Greater than parity Less than parity Welfare Above the poverty Well-structured Large but low-yielding line commercial farms farms Below the poverty Productive small farms Marginal farms, both line with limited resources poor and inefficient Measuring farm income • Dimensions of the farm income problem – poverty (income adequacy), instability (income stability), comparability (income parity) – conceptualising farm problems using the farm welfare/resource returns square • Aggregate income derived from the agricultural accounts calculated on a ‘national farm’ basis (CSO Economic Accounts for Agriculture) • Different income concepts are used – net value added, income from self-employment in agriculture, net farm income • Dividing aggregate farm income by the numbers engaged to obtain a measure of the health of the farming sector Sources of data on farm incomes • Macroeconomic – Economic accounts for agriculture – Combine with data on sources of labour input (LFS vs AWU) – Limited to averages/useful for showing trends over time • Microeconomic – National farm surveys (Teagasc) – Household budget surveys (CSO) – Good for showing differentiation within the sector/may not be fully representative Eurostat Income Indicators Operating surplus
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