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Abstract
The objective of this paper is to study the effect of agricultural policies on marketing decisions as well
as the link between marketing and production decisions. We develop an analytical model to study how
policies affect marketing decisions and conditions under which the two types of decisions are
separable. We found that government policies impact marketing decisions. We also found that the
necessary conditions to have separability of decisions are rather restrictive, even in the presence of a
perfect hedging tool. We build a stochastic multiperiodic farm model to investigate the empirical
relevance of our theoretical findings. The farm model is used to model a representative farm for the
Midi-Pyrénées region in France (South-West). The results confirm the impact of price risk and direct
payments on both production and marketing decisions with the proportion of grain marketed under
different contracts that vary. We also observe that a large supply of marketing contracts allows to
stabilize production choices. In particular, marketing contracts can contribute to help farmers to
adopt green practices, which are riskier than conventional techniques intensive in chemical inputs.