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Have been reading Grom's 14:49 link, from which I got (2013 figures)
"Most of the money Britain receives from the
EU is used to subsidise farming (€3.1bn). "
So, that means about 3/10ths of what EU exit stands to save us will continue to prop up the farmers. *Provided* the government of the day upholds a promise made by UKIP.
Ultimately it is the consumer who squeezes the supermarkets on prices and they, in turn squeeze the farmers. European farmers will get their subsidy recalibrated, likely lessened because UK Subs are missing. They will have to raise their prices and our farmers will then be in a position to either win undercut sales, abroad, or follow suit on price.
All this time (started 1960s, that article said) food prices have been kept artificially low, by these subsidies. Needless to say, even if it would be desirable to see what the natural price level really is, removing subsidies will hit the poorest hardest. Not something to be attempted as some form of social experiment.
It does, however underline my sense of the falsehood built into our economic systems. We don't pay the lowest earners enough to buy the basics for civilised life at their natural, unsubsidised price. Yet, if we did, manufactured and luxury goods would go up so much that even the well off would start complaining about prices.