Employment effects of ecological farming at the farm level
This deliverable investigates the employment effects of ecological farming by analysing both the differences in the intensity of labour use and rewards to skills. It contributes to one of the main outcomes/achievements of the LIFT project, i.e. to "identify the sources of performance and sustainability differences between farms of different types, size and output complexity as observed in the landscape of the European Union (EU)". It is based on collaborative research on Task 3.5 'Employment effects of ecological farming at the farm level' of LIFT between UNIKENT (England) (Task Leader), INRAE (France), DEMETER (Greece), MTA KRTK (Hungary) and IRWiR PAN (Poland). The analyses reported consider the differences between farms on a scale from the most conventional farming systems to the most ecological as measured by the intensities of use of external inputs and labour, the receipt of agri-environmental payments (AEP), capital and involvement in organic production. This approach was used since, at the time of working on the deliverable the LIFT typology protocol on how to classify farms according to the different degrees of adoption of ecological approaches to farming has not been completed. The approach nevertheless makes use of the LIFT conceptual typology in Deliverable 1.1 (Rega et al., 2018). In the analysis, intensity of labour use is studied as a function of farming inputs (fuel, fertiliser, crop protection chemicals), capital and AEP. Dependent and independent variables have been standardised by dividing them by the output value and the resulting ratios named intensities of use. The standardisation by dividing by the overall output value was done to remove the effect of different farm sizes and to focus the discussion on the way output is produced, rather than how land is used. In order to reduce the impact of quality differences in the inputs, we make use of monetary value of input used to take account of quality differences that would be reflected in price differentials. Five EU Member States (MSs) are ...