Description
Book SynopsisIn 2007 the farm subsidies of the European Union's Common Agricultural Policy took over 40 percent of the entire EU budget. How did a sector of diminishing social and economic importance manage to maintain such political prominence? The conventional...
Trade ReviewHow is one to make sense of the surprising resilience of the Common Agricultural Policy (CAP) in the face of efforts at reforming it? This important book has much to say about the limbo in which the CAP currently finds itself, but, unlike most of the literature in the field, it does so through a historical analysis of the origins of the CAP, from the entering into force of the European Economic Community Treaty in January 1958 to the settlement of the common grain price in December 1964. This is the occasion for the author—a historian—not only to illuminate the particular context in which the CAP materialized and to highlight its lasting effect on subsequent policy developments, but also to challenge the prevailing (liberal intergovernmentalist) view of the CAP as a policy driven and captured by national, commercial interests.... Farmers on Welfare offers an original and compelling ideal-typical portrait of the CAP as a welfare policy and makes a significant contribution to the literature. Students of the CAP and European Union politics alike will find it both highly informative and entertaining.
-- Christilla Roederer-Rynning * International Affairs *