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The EU Recipe for Trade Deals: Go Easy on Beef, Go Hard on Wine. Here Is Why That Makes Perfect Sense

| 2 min read| By EuroBulletin24 briefing
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The EU's approach to free trade agreements systematically protects European wine, spirits, and specialty foods while conceding on commodity beef. Here is the political logic behind the asymmetry.

The EU-Australia free trade agreement that provisionally entered force in early 2026 contains a provision that encapsulates everything about European trade policy in a single clause: Australian beef receives improved but still quota-limited access to European markets, while Australian-produced products sold under names like 'Parmesan,' 'Feta,' or 'Prosciutto di Parma' are prohibited. The geographical indication protection for European specialty foods, in other words, extends extraterritorially — Australian producers cannot use the names, even if they are producing identical products.

This is not hypocrisy. It is strategy, and it is strategy that works. The EU's network of geographical indication protections — covering approximately 3,500 products across food, drink, and craft categories — creates legal moats around the European products that command the highest per-unit value in global markets. A bottle of Champagne sells at a premium that no Australian sparkling wine can command regardless of quality. A wheel of authentic Parmigiano-Reggiano carries a price that generic 'Parmesan' cannot achieve. The protections are not purely about quality — they are about brand, heritage, and the ability to charge luxury prices for commodity inputs.

Beef is different. European beef production is high-quality but high-cost, and the political economy of protecting it fully in trade agreements is increasingly difficult to sustain as trading partners demand reciprocal access. The EU's approach in recent deals — including Mercosur, Australia, and the CETA with Canada — has been to negotiate quota-limited beef access that grows over time, with safeguard clauses that allow the EU to suspend concessions if import volumes cause market disruption.

French and Irish beef farmers despise this approach. They see any concession as a betrayal. The EU Commission argues that the quota levels negotiated provide effective protection while keeping the overall deal viable for industries — automotive, chemicals, machinery — that gain far more from improved market access than the agricultural sector loses from beef competition.

The argument is economically correct and politically corrosive. Agricultural communities across France, Germany, and Ireland vote disproportionately for parties that oppose exactly this kind of trade policy calculus. The tension between European trade strategy and European agricultural politics is structural and irresolvable by the terms of existing political settlements.

#eu#trade#beef#wine#mercosur#agriculture
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