Shortfall on farmers' common agricultural policy reforms
Series: RICS Press Release ; 10 June 2003 (1)Publication details: 2003Subject(s): Summary: Farmers who have entered into agri-property agreements not knowing they would be faced with future reductions in their subsidies are likely to be penalised as a result of the forthcoming Common Agricultural Policy reforms. It is widely believed that there are insufficient funds to handle the volume of applications despite the proposed creation of a National Reserve to compensate farmers. Organisations including the RICS, the NFU and the Country Land and Business Association have joined forces in common agreement on a number of areas that need to be addressed in the field of property transfers and leases. ww.rics.org/includes/listprmoreall.html?faculty=RICS&| Item type | Current library | Call number | Copy number | Status | Barcode | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| News article | London News article | WB3922-14 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | 1 | Available | 122627-1001 |
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Farmers who have entered into agri-property agreements not knowing they would be faced with future reductions in their subsidies are likely to be penalised as a result of the forthcoming Common Agricultural Policy reforms. It is widely believed that there are insufficient funds to handle the volume of applications despite the proposed creation of a National Reserve to compensate farmers. Organisations including the RICS, the NFU and the Country Land and Business Association have joined forces in common agreement on a number of areas that need to be addressed in the field of property transfers and leases. ww.rics.org/includes/listprmoreall.html?faculty=RICS&