Just Accepted Manuscripts
Policy Paper

Where is the Italian agriculture heading? A discussion in light of the prospects for the future CAP

Fabio Bartolini
University of Ferrara
Anna Carbone
University la Tuscia
Tatiana Castellotti
CREA-PB
Silvia Coderoni
Università di Teramo
Raffaele Cortignani
Università della Tuscia
Raffaele D'Annolfo
CREA-PB
Giovanni Dara Guccione
CREA-PB
Michele Donati
università di Parma
Francesca Galli
Università di Pisa
Roberto Henke
CREA-PB
Giampiero Mazzocchi
CREA-PB
Alessandro Monteleone
CREA-PB
Alessandra Pesce
CREA-PB
Maria Rosaria Pupo D'Andrea
CREA-PB
Benedetto Rocchi
Università di Firenze
Donato Romano
Università di Firenze
Roberta Sardone
CREA-PB
Franco Sotte
AIEAA professor emeritus
Stefano Targetti
University of Bologna
Catia Zumpano
CREA-PB
Meri Raggi
University of Bologna

Published 2025-07-23

Keywords

  • sustainability,
  • Italy,
  • agricultural and food sectors,
  • agricultural policy,
  • EU Rural Development Policy

How to Cite

Arfini, F., Bartolini, F., Carbone, A., Castellotti, T., Coderoni, S., Cortignani, R., D’Annolfo, R., Dara Guccione, G., Donati, M., Galli, F., Henke, R., Mazzocchi, G., Monteleone, A., Pesce, A., Pupo D’Andrea, M. R., Rocchi, B., Romano, D., Sardone, R., Sotte, F., Targetti, S., Zumpano, C., & Raggi, M. (2025). Where is the Italian agriculture heading? A discussion in light of the prospects for the future CAP. Bio-Based and Applied Economics. https://doi.org/10.36253/bae-18042

Abstract

In early 2025, the European Union launched a new phase of dialogue on the future of agricultural and food policies, aiming to move beyond the sustainability-centred narratives of the Green Deal and Farm to Fork strategy. The initiative, grounded in the “Strategic Dialogue on the Future of EU Agriculture” and the Commission’s communication “A Vision for Agriculture and Food,” reframes the role of agriculture within a broader geopolitical and socio-economic context. The Italian Council for Agricultural Research and Analysis of the Agricultural Economy (CREA) and the Italian Association of Agricultural and Applied Economics (AIEAA) convened a study day to examine the relevance and the implications of the EU’s Vision for Italy. This paper presents a synthesis of the discussions and reflections, structured along four thematic pillars: economic, environmental, social, and institutional sustainability. The analysis highlights the structural weaknesses of Italian agriculture, the need for circular and diversified agricultural systems, the integration of agroecological and climate resilience strategies, the need for generational and social renewal, and the necessity for political reflection on the adequacy of the Italian agricultural policy governance system. By capturing the perspectives of researchers and practitioners, the paper contributes to the national debate on reshaping EU agricultural policy beyond 2027..