Agricultural and Livestock Plan 2024/2025

-

The Brazilian Agriculture and Livestock Confederation (CNA) highlights the priority proposals for the 2024/2025 Harvest Plan from the perspective of rural producers:

  • Guarantee supplementation of R$2.1 billion to Rural Insurance in 2024 (totaling R$3 billion) and R$4 billion for 2025.

  • To make available R$570 billion in financeable resources from the PAP 2024/2025being R$359 billion for funding and marketing, R$111 billion for investments and R$100 billion for family farming. Ensuring that the announced resources are available throughout the entire harvest.

  • Prioritize resources for investment purposesmainly to small and medium producers (Pronaf and Pronamp) and programs for building warehouses (PCA), irrigation (Proirrig), technological innovations (Inovagro) and for Sustainable Agricultural Production Systems (Renovagro).

  • Strengthen the budget for Official Credit Operations (OOC)especially subsidies for price support and marketing and costing.

  • Promote regulatory measures to expand sources of rural credit resources through measures that make the application of rural credit requirements more flexible.

  • Regulate the Complementary Law No. 137/2020which created the Catastrophe Fund.

  • Enable the fee rebate or increase in the financeable limit for producers who promote socio-environmental practices.

  • Promote adjustments to avoid excesses and distortions in the interpretation of resolutions, such as CMN Resolution no. 5,081/2023 and BCB Resolution no. 140/2021, which deal with socio-environmental issueswithout prejudice to environmental preservation.

  • Promote the advancement of the capital market and private agribusiness securities, making it possible to increase the funding of the sector.

  • Curb tying practices and enable the reduction of ancillary costs of rural credit, especially through regulation and modernization of the registration market.

The article is in Portuguese

Tags: Agricultural Livestock Plan

-

-

NEXT IBGE: Interest rates and retail crisis may have influenced the unemployment rate, says economist
-

-

-