Sweden has been a member of the  European Union for ten years. Competition on the agricultural markets has  increased and Swedish exporters of food products have faced tougher competition  as well as increasing opportunities. In 2005, when the most recent reform of  the common agricultural policy was implemented in Sweden, pre-conditions for  agricultural production changed. The reform is mainly a change from production  subsidies to income support. Farmers will no longer get subsidies for producing  certain goods but will be supported anyway. Profits and production levels will  increasingly depend on market conditions.
In this report agricultural  competitiveness is analysed using trade patterns and trade developments on the  EU-market since 1995. Swedish exports are analysed and these exports will  mirror company competitiveness in the absence of market imperfections. 
The competitiveness of Swedish  agriculture is affected by EU farm policy, the possibilities of producing  differentiated products and the distance to consumers. This report concludes  that almost all Swedish food exports contain varieties of products that are  also imported. This makes differentiation important to Swedish producers. The  competitiveness of Swedish producers has improved and differentiation in  high-quality varieties has become an increasingly important part of Swedish  food exports after the country became a member of the EU. Processed foods, such  as cereal preparations and mixtures of agricultural products (sauces, soups and  chocolate for example) were found to be competitive varieties. 
Distance also seemed to matter to  Swedish producers of agricultural products. The importance of distance was  found to be more important to companies exporting meat, dairy products, cereals  and oil-seeds when compared to exports of other food products and also to  exports in general.