The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Macron eyes action against Chinese farm buyers taking advantage of France

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PARIS: President Emmanuel Macron promised measures to help prevent foreign investors buying French farms amid concern that Chinese businesses are taking advantage of low land prices and distressed rural communitie­s.

“For me, French agricultur­al lands are strategic investment­s on which our sovereignt­y depends, so we can’t allow hundreds of hectares of land to be bought by foreign powers without us knowing the aims of these purchases,” Macron told a crowd of young farmers at the presidenti­al palace.

He was referring to news last year that a Chinese fund had bought 900 hectares of land in the cereal-growing Allier region in central France, following an acquisitio­n of 1,700 hectares in the Indre area in 2016.

“We will very obviously put in place regulatory safeguards and will work with you... to put an end to what happened,” he told the farmers, referring to the acquisitio­ns.

Australia announced new restrictio­ns on foreign buyers of agricultur­al land at the beginning of the month, while concerns about Chinese expansion abroad have been voiced from Africa to Canada in the past.

At the end of last year, French rural associatio­n Safar urged the government to act against a huge increase in financial investors buying land which it said imperilled France’s traditiona­l family ownership model.

Most of the new financial investors were French, it said, but after the Chinese acquisitio­n last year, farmers’ union FDSEA accused the fund of preying on farmers on the verge of bankruptcy.

Macron was elected last May as a pro-business and pro-trade centrist, but he has also made shield- ing what he considers France’s strategic economic interests a priority.

At the European level, he has argued for new measures to prevent the dumping of cheap jobkilling Chinese imports on the EU as well as closer scrutiny of foreign investment­s in strategic sectors.

In January, Economy Minister Bruno Le Maire said France would broaden a domestic law that already subjects foreign investment­s in the energy and transport sectors to scrutiny to include purchases in the technology industry.

Helping France’s farmers was another campaign pledge from Macron who wants to force supermarke­ts to pay them higher prices to raise incomes and help slow a population exodus from rural areas.

The 40-year-old leader, a former investment banker painted by critics as a ‘president for the rich’, is keen to bolster his credential­s among voters outside of urban areas where support for him is strongest.

He has proposed an investment plan worth five billion euros (US$6.2 billion) over his term which he said Thursday would include a new fund worth one billion intended to provide loans to young farmers.

“We are going to widen the sources of finance to take into account the changes underway and allow young farmers to start in their profession in the best possible way,” he said.

The farming community remains sceptical, however, and a series of protests have been held nationwide recently over changes to farm subsidy rules and a possible trade deal with South American countries. — AFP

 ??  ?? A calf feeds from a cow ahead of the opening of the 2018 Paris Internatio­nal Agricultur­e Fair (Salon de l’Agricultur­e) at the Porte de Versailles exhibition centre in Paris, on February 22. President Emmanuel Macron promised measures to help prevent...
A calf feeds from a cow ahead of the opening of the 2018 Paris Internatio­nal Agricultur­e Fair (Salon de l’Agricultur­e) at the Porte de Versailles exhibition centre in Paris, on February 22. President Emmanuel Macron promised measures to help prevent...

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