Agricultural policy in Australia: deregulation, bipartisanship and agrarian sentiment

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Abstract

This paper provides an overview of the development of agricultural policy in Australia from a complex web of government intervention in the sector in the first half of the 20th century to the deregulation of the past 40 years. It highlights the close interrelationship between agricultural policy and manufacturing policy as well as the areas in which agricultural policy has been distinctive, namely the largely bipartisan nature of agricultural policy development and the strong cultural attachment across the community to farmers in general and family farming in particular. Recent policy debates suggest that agricultural policy will remain a sector apart in terms of the broadly bipartisan nature of policy and the ongoing influence of non-economic considerations. Australia will retain its comparative advantage in agricultural exports into the future and policymakers will need to continue to balance policies that support the economic performance of the sector with those that reflect community expectations of support for the farming community more broadly.

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APA

Botterill, L. C. (2016). Agricultural policy in Australia: deregulation, bipartisanship and agrarian sentiment. Australian Journal of Political Science, 51(4), 667–682. https://doi.org/10.1080/10361146.2016.1239567

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