Abstract

The conflict between capital-intensive agriculture, often called industrial agriculture, and sustainable farming is ongoing, and not because of Western European countries, where intensification is increasingly sustainable. It is caused by several million small farms in Central and Eastern Europe that must choose a long-term development path. This is also a dilemma for agricultural policy: Are small farms so environmentally friendly that they should play the role of ‘landscape guardians’ at the expense of public support and economic vegetation, or should they strive to improve productivity through investments? This study offers a methodological contribution to the value-based sustainability approach by computing indicators of environmental sustainable value (ESV). The authors have attempted to combine the value-oriented approach with frontier benchmarking. They then tested how the European Union Common Agricultural Policy (CAP) schemes contribute to ESV using a long-term panel of regionally representative farms from Farm Accountancy Data Network (FADN) with regard to factor endowments, for the years 2004–2017. The seminal within–between specification was employed to control the time variant and time invariant space heterogeneity of European regions. The main finding is that higher investment support is beneficial to ESV. Regarding factor endowment influence, there was a positive impact of the capital–labour ratio. Except the cross-sectional impact of environmental subsidies, the payments exert a negative effect on ESV.

Highlights

  • Within the Treaty on the Functioning of the European Union, one of the main objectives of Common Agricultural Policy (CAP) is to increase agricultural productivity by ensuring technical progress, the rational development of agricultural production and the optimum utilisation of the factors of production (Czyżewski et al 2019a)

  • The research carried out confirmed the hypotheses formulated at the beginning except the one which assumed the positive impact of Less Favoured Areas subsidies (LFA) on environmental sustainable value (ESV)

  • Our study demonstrates that higher investment support and the cross-sectional impact of environmental subsidies are beneficial and statistically significant for ESV, whereas other payments have the negative effect

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Summary

Introduction

Within the Treaty on the Functioning of the European Union, one of the main objectives of Common Agricultural Policy (CAP) is to increase agricultural productivity by ensuring technical progress, the rational development of agricultural production and the optimum utilisation of the factors of production ( labour) (Czyżewski et al 2019a). Sustainable development, which is currently one of the most important objectives of the EU’s CAP (Fischler 2002), is the subject of many scientific papers (Glavic et al 2007; Shearman 1990; Harris 2000; Connelly and Graham 2003; Waas et al 2011). Achieving this status is possible, among other reasons, because of a set of CAP instruments that are key factors determining the eco-efficiency of agricultural activity

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