EuropeSouth AsiaAsia PacificAmericasMiddle EastAfricaBBC HomepageWorld ServiceEducation
News image
News image
News image
News imageNews image
News image
Front Page
News image
World
News image
UK
News image
UK Politics
News image
Business
News image
Sci/Tech
News image
Health
News image
Education
News image
Sport
News image
Entertainment
News image
Talking Point
News image
News image
News image
On Air
Feedback
Low Graphics
Help
News imageNews imageNews image
Thursday, October 8, 1998 Published at 17:02 GMT 18:02 UK
News image
News image
UK
News image
Farmers facing financial crisis
News image
Farmers suffer their second year of plummeting incomes
News image
UK farmers have seen their incomes drop 56% in the last year, an independent report has found.

The National Farmers Union says the slump is the worst financial crisis in agriculture since before World War II and the report predicts a further 48% drop in the coming year.

The effects of a poor harvest and lower milk prices have still to be fully felt, it says.


[ image: Farmers have been protesting]
Farmers have been protesting
The survey was carried out by accountancy firm Deloitte & Touche, which looked at more than 300 farms in England and Wales with a total area of more than 100,000 acres.

Deloitte and Touche agriculture partner Vincent Hedley-Lewis said the situation for farmers, especially those growing cereals, would be even worse were it not for EU subsidies.

The company reckons that without the EU money 82% of farmers would make no profit at all.

Average profits for farmers were now �50 an acre, a level last seen nine years ago, when the annual income survey began.

Economic disasters

British farmers have been battered in recent years by a series of economic disasters.

The BSE crisis led to the ban on beef exports and the strong pound has left other export produce uncompetitive in foreign markets.

Mr Hedley-Lewis believes that the new Working Time Directive introduced this month could harm farmers "far more than people think".

The directive means employees, including farm workers, cannot be made to work more than 48 hours a week and must be given holidays.

'Time of opportunity'

Mr Hedley-Lewis said farmers who minimised costs, kept enough cash to see them through tough times and considered innovations such as sharing equipment with neighbours, should survive.

"It sounds disastrous, but for those who restructure their businesses correctly it will be a time of opportunity," he said.

"The important thing is not to panic."

While profits are dropping sharply, they are doing so from the relatively high levels of 1994 and 1995.

Farmers are caught in a dilemma, Mr Hedley-Lewis said. They have to be competitive, but are under pressure to keep the countryside as it is and avoid pesticides.

Government tackles supermarkets

Agriculture Minister Nick Brown has already promised cash-strapped farmers that he will meet supermarket chains to discuss meat prices.

During an hour of talks at the Welsh Office in Cardiff, farmers pressed the case for a one-off windfall tax on supermarket profits to rescue their industry - similar to that levied on privatised utility companies when Labour took power.

The quarter-point interest rate cut announced on Thursday was welcomed by the NFU, but it said further action was needed.

"The strength of sterling has been one of the main reasons behind the severe economic crisis crippling British agriculture," a spokesman said.

News image


Advanced options | Search tips


News image
News image
News imageBack to top | BBC News Home | BBC Homepage |
News image

News imageNews imageNews image
UK Contents
News image
News imageNorthern Ireland
News imageScotland
News imageWales
News imageEngland
News imageNews image
Relevant Stories
News image
02 Oct 98�|�UK
Riot police confront farmers
News image
27 Sep 98�|�UK
Scottish farmers prepare sheep cull
News image
24 Jul 98�|�UK
Farming profits collapse
News image

News image
News image
News image
News imageInternet Links
News image
News imageNews image
Ministry of Agriculture
News image
National Farmers Union
News image
Deloitte & Touche
News image
News imageNews image
The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

News image
News image
News image
News imageIn this section
News image
Next steps for peace
News image
Blairs' surprise over baby
News image
Bowled over by Lord's
News image
Beef row 'compromise' under fire
News image
Hamilton 'would sell mother'
News image
Industry misses new trains target
News image
From Sport
Quins fightback shocks Cardiff
News image
From Business
Vodafone takeover battle heats up
News image
IRA ceasefire challenge rejected
News image
Thousands celebrate Asian culture
News image
From Sport
Christie could get two-year ban
News image
From Entertainment
Colleagues remember Compo
News image
Mother pleads for baby's return
News image
Toys withdrawn in E.coli health scare
News image
From Health
Nurses role set to expand
News image
Israeli PM's plane in accident
News image
More lottery cash for grassroots
News image
Pro-lifers plan shock launch
News image
Double killer gets life
News image
From Health
Cold 'cure' comes one step closer
News image
From UK Politics
Straw on trial over jury reform
News image
Tatchell calls for rights probe into Mugabe
News image
Ex-spy stays out in the cold
News image
From UK Politics
Blair warns Livingstone
News image
From Health
Smear equipment `misses cancers'
News image
From Entertainment
Boyzone star gets in Christmas spirit
News image
Fake bubbly warning
News image
Murder jury hears dead girl's diary
News image
From UK Politics
Germ warfare fiasco revealed
News image
Blair babe triggers tabloid frenzy
News image
Tourists shot by mistake
News image
A new look for News Online
News image

News image
News image
News image