- an increase in output of agriculture at producer prices in real terms (+4.6%);
- a rise in input costs (+5.3%), while depreciation remained stable, in real terms;
- a decrease in the real value of subsidies net of taxes (-3.1%).
These estimates for the EU27 published by Eurostat, the Statistical Office of the European Communities, are based on data supplied by the national authorities in the Member States.
The strongest rises in real agricultural income per worker have been estimated for Lithuania (+58.5%), the Czech Republic (+20.6%), Estonia (+19.4%) and Luxembourg (+16.2%). The largest declines are expected in Bulgaria (-18.6%), Romania (-16.1%) and Portugal (-5.8%).
EU27 agricultural output in 2007 grew by 4.6%, mainly due to a significant increase in the value of crop production (+8.6%), while animal production remained nearly stable (+0.5%).
In crop production, the fall in output volume (-1.4%) was outweighed by the growth in producer prices (+10.2%). With the exception of fruit (-5.7%), crop volumes did not fall significantly, for example cereals (-2.7%) and fresh vegetables (-1.2%). The sharpest increases in crop prices were recorded for cereals (+45.4%) and oil seeds (+22.4%). On the other hand, prices for olive oil (-20.0%) and sugar beet (-13.2%) fell significantly.
The stability in the value of animal output in 2007 was the result of a small rise in production volumes (+1.5%) and a slight decrease in producer prices (-1.0%). The growth in the real value of milk production was driven by a rise in prices (+7.8%), while volume remained nearly stable (-0.3%). The increase in the volume of pig production (+4.3%) was outweighed by sharply falling prices (-12.3%). In the case of poultry, both production volumes (+2.9%) and producer prices (+7.8%) increased.
EU27 agricultural input costs (intermediate consumption) grew by 5.3%, mainly owing to the sharp increase in feeding stuff prices (+13.9%), which was itself the result of higher crop producer prices. Energy costs decreased by 2.8% as a result of the reduction in both volumes (-1.7%) and prices (-1.1%).