Lessons learned and policy implications from 20 years of Swiss agricultural policy reforms: A review of policy evaluations

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Abstract

Learning from the experiences of other countries can support efforts to improve agricultural policies. Switzerland provides an interesting case because its policy is exceptionally targeted towards the establishment of sustainable production systems. We describe the history and the current state of Swiss agricultural policy, review evaluations of policy reforms, summarise their impact and outline the lessons learned for policy developments in other countries. We discuss four implications: i) some goals have been met, albeit at a high cost, and so, increasing efficiency of policies is key; ii) there is a need for more coherence and coordination regarding the different policy programmes (i.e. in the sense of a ‘food system policy’); iii) cross-compliance measures (i.e. minimum standards for receiving support) have an important leverage effect; and iv) policy differentiation (e.g. by spatial targeting) and increasing farmers’ discretion over how to achieve goals (e.g. by implementing results-based payments) are key for future policies.

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Huber, R., El Benni, N., & Finger, R. (2024). Lessons learned and policy implications from 20 years of Swiss agricultural policy reforms: A review of policy evaluations. Bio-Based and Applied Economics, 13(2), 121–146. https://doi.org/10.36253/bae-14214

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