The European  Union’s sugar policy is one of the most distorting policies within the common agricultural  policy. It includes import control, production quota, and export refunds to  support producer price within the EU at levels high above international prices.  The main beneficiaries of the support system are the EU sugar industries and EU  beet growers, but they are not the only producers benefiting from the high EU  sugar price. Under the Sugar Protocol a number of former European colonies in  Africa, the Caribbean and the Pacific, in addition to India, have  preferential access to the EU market for their sugar exports. And new entrants  are standing in line. The least developed countries have been granted preferential  access for sugar through the EU Everything  but Arms initiative which will be fully implemented in 2009.
In 2006, the Commission launched a sugar reform  of which a core element was a price reduction of the protected EU price. The  purpose of this report is to analyze the consequences of the reform for the  developing countries and the EU.
Using the CAPRI  modelling system, a main impact of the sugar reform for the developing  countries is found to be that the Community price cut reduces the future values  of preferential agreements for the favored producers. However, both consumers  and the processing industry in the developing countries are better off with the  reform. The reform results in a clear welfare gain for the EU, although the  sugar producers are hit by the lower price. Finally, it is found that trade  preferences in combination with the common market order for sugar is an  inefficient way to transfer resources to the developing countries.