Box 1: Key Statistics
The total amount of support to agriculture in developed countries now stands at over $300 billion
per year.
$300 billion would pay for clean water for everyone in the world ($170 billion), education for all
($6 billion), basic health and nutrition for all ($13 billion) and pay off the public debt of the most
heavily indebted countries ($90 billion).
Each tonne of wheat and sugar from the UK is sold on international markets at an average price of
40% and 60% below the cost of production respectively (ie, it is dumped)
Every wheat farmer in the EU currently receives a subsidy of approximately £35 per tonne. As
ActionAid research reveals, in Pakistan subsidies to small-scale wheat producers have been
slashed under pressure from international institutions.
In the UK, the richest 20% of farm holdings receive 80% of subsidies. The top 2,000 UK farmers
receive annual subsidy cheques of about £100,000. The majority of UK farmers (about 60%)
receive less than £5,000 a year.
In the UK, farm subsidies cost every individual at least £50 a year. Agricultural support has also
inflated consumer prices, and the approximate cost to each UK citizen is an additional £50 each year.