The Scotsman

‘Whole sector must support producers’

- By BRIAN HENDERSON

Describing yesterday’s figures as an “income shocker”, NFU Scotland has called on the country’s booming food and drink sector to take immediate action to address the huge imbalance between the growth and profitabil­ity being enjoyed by retailers and processors and the returns being made by those producing the raw materials at the farm gate.

The union’s policy director, Jonnie Hall, said that the farm business income figures put a clear onus on those further up the food and drink chain to address the underlying disparity in returns:

“Scotland’s food and drink sector, lauded for its ongoing success and ambitious targets, must start to deliver for those at the farmgate and who have seen their incomes fall by more than 75 per cent since the start of the decade,” he said.

Stating that that the steep, downward spiral in farm incomes was placing huge financial pressure on Scotland’s farmers, Hall also said that the low level of returns brought into sharp focus the overriding need for post-brexit farm policy and support structures which would secure profitabil­ity and stability at farm level.

“These bleak income figures provide hard evidence of the sustained financial damage to farm businesses across a range of sectors,” said Hall. “Anecdotal comments and suspicion around how difficult it has been for farms and crofts to make a profit in recent times are now backed by fact.

“The viability, let alone profitabil­ity, of every Scottish farming business relies on three cogs working together – costs, markets and support.”

He said that given the deteriorat­ion in farm incomes, the evidence was now clear that no part of the equation was currently working.

“Whether producing livestock, crops, milk, poultry, pigs, fruit or veg, farmers and crofters continue to face rising input and compliance costs, declining market returns and an erosion of support payments, conspiring to threaten the very existence of many,” he added.

“These figures highlight the absolute requiremen­t to drive down all costs, ensure a much fairer share of the margins in the supply chain to the primary producer, and the vital need for government­s to commit to ongoing support targeted at active farm businesses.

He said that as the industry entered a period of even greater uncertaint­y, “with the potential to further undermine confidence”, it was essential that producers were given unequivoca­l signals that new trading deals and support arrangemen­ts would put the prosperity of farming businesses top of the agenda.

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