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                 SLI-rapport 2001:3 
                
                    Subsidiarity, the CAP and EU Enlargement
                
                  
                
                     
                    
                Författare: 
                
            
           Ewa Rabinowicz 
           
           Evald Nalin 
           
           K.J. Thomson 
           
           
                     
                     
          
                Subsidiarity is the fundamental EU idea that the Union should not take on tasks that
  can be handled as or more efficiently by individual Member States. EU intervention
  in decision-making or financing must thus be shown to give added value, compared
  with national management. What precisely does the EU level add to agricultural policy?
  And what is lost by its centralisation? 
As long as the CAP was almost exclusively about market regulation and trade policy,
  there was probably not much to discuss. But, as the policy has moved towards direct
  payments to farmers, the added value in its “common” status becomes increasingly
  unclear. What is the advantage of jointly deciding the size and structure of direct
  payments in different parts of the EU and financing them from a common budget? If
  different countries really have different preferences when it comes to prioritising agriculture
  at the expense of other sectors or objectives, what common EU interest is
  there in hindering subsidiarity? And why should environment measures, for nature
  or countryside conservation purposes – in northern Sweden, the Greek Islands or the
  Austrian Alps – be decided and financed jointly? 
The issue of subsidiarity becomes even more relevant from an enlargement perspective.
  The enlargement eastwards of ten or so countries will change the EU markedly.
  Does enlargement changes the EU or its agriculture to the extent that a common policy
  is neither possible nor relevant? 
               
               
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Författare:
        
            
           
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