Farm subsidies will stay at their current levels (presumably without an inflation adjustment) for five years after Brexit, and beyond the next general election, Michael Gove told the Oxford Farming Conference at the beginning of January. In the spring the Government will publish an agriculture bill that will provide more detail about its policies. Wyn Grant (University of Warwick) explains the future of farm policy after Brexit
Through re-shaping animal welfare policy in light of Brexit, the government has an historic opportun...
A recent rapid change in the cotton harvesting system due to the inception of the John Deere 7760 ...
Long-term forecasts claiming that leaving the EU with no deal on trade would be economically disastr...
Secretary of State for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs Michael Gove has stated that Britain shou...
We have had 45 years of the Common Agricultural Policy. What will the BAP (British Agricultural Poli...
Contrary to some predictions, Britain's economy has not crashed in the two years since the EU refere...
Michael Kenny and Jack Sheldon write that, although May's government has been prepared to make vario...
With the second Brexit analysis leak, Michael Ellington and Costas Milas write that it is in no one'...
UK farmers have been promised that £3bn of EU direct payments, which come to end because of Brexit, ...
The roots of Brexit lie in Britain's broken growth model. This was acknowledged in the immediate aft...
The full economic consequences of the UK's vote to leave the European Union will not be realised for...
It has been recognised that few cattle farmers undertake biosecurity practices on their farms. Appro...
Anna Valero writes that funding clean technologies, such as ocean and wind energy, can be a triple w...
The government has refused to publish its sector-by-sector analyses of the impact of Brexit, arguing...
The proposed new sifting committee for Statutory Instruments under the EU (Withdrawal) Bill will not...
Through re-shaping animal welfare policy in light of Brexit, the government has an historic opportun...
A recent rapid change in the cotton harvesting system due to the inception of the John Deere 7760 ...
Long-term forecasts claiming that leaving the EU with no deal on trade would be economically disastr...
Secretary of State for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs Michael Gove has stated that Britain shou...
We have had 45 years of the Common Agricultural Policy. What will the BAP (British Agricultural Poli...
Contrary to some predictions, Britain's economy has not crashed in the two years since the EU refere...
Michael Kenny and Jack Sheldon write that, although May's government has been prepared to make vario...
With the second Brexit analysis leak, Michael Ellington and Costas Milas write that it is in no one'...
UK farmers have been promised that £3bn of EU direct payments, which come to end because of Brexit, ...
The roots of Brexit lie in Britain's broken growth model. This was acknowledged in the immediate aft...
The full economic consequences of the UK's vote to leave the European Union will not be realised for...
It has been recognised that few cattle farmers undertake biosecurity practices on their farms. Appro...
Anna Valero writes that funding clean technologies, such as ocean and wind energy, can be a triple w...
The government has refused to publish its sector-by-sector analyses of the impact of Brexit, arguing...
The proposed new sifting committee for Statutory Instruments under the EU (Withdrawal) Bill will not...
Through re-shaping animal welfare policy in light of Brexit, the government has an historic opportun...
A recent rapid change in the cotton harvesting system due to the inception of the John Deere 7760 ...
Long-term forecasts claiming that leaving the EU with no deal on trade would be economically disastr...