Agricultural production and support in Canada, the United States, and the European Union are highly concentrated on larger farms, which have higher income levels than the average of all farms. Smaller farms, though, are more dependent on support (in particular, payments) which accounts for a larger share of their gross receipts. As payments to farmers are more equally distributed than production, government support reduces income inequality by farm size and farm type. This study, carried out in the context of the OECD Network for Farm Level Analysis, concludes that improved efficiency and equity of policies will require better targeting of income support and, in turn, better information on the income and wealth situation of the agricultural population.
Distribution of Support and Income in Agriculture
Policy paper
Share
Facebook
Twitter
LinkedIn
Abstract
In the same series
-
17 February 202673 Pages
-
Working paper
Economic analysis, literature findings and synthesis
28 May 202590 Pages -
Working paper
Impacts on the triple challenge and cost‑benefits analysis
22 May 202527 Pages -
Working paper
A literature review on policy effectiveness
9 May 202547 Pages -
Working paper
Case study of the Australian beef and wheat sectors
2 April 202580 Pages -
21 February 202570 Pages
-
Working paper
Evidence from 40 countries
19 February 202539 Pages -
14 February 202529 Pages
Related publications
-
Report
Framework, indicator methodology and results
29 October 202575 Pages -
Working paper
Reinforcing global food markets
1 August 202549 Pages -
Working paper
Impacts on the triple challenge and cost‑benefits analysis
22 May 202527 Pages -
12 May 202530 Pages
-
18 April 202558 Pages