From 1940, a minority in
Fianna Fáil and coalition cabinets consistently argued for larger farms to be encouraged, instead of sponsoring new small farmers that often had too little capital, skills or enthusiasm. This was successfully opposed for social and political reasons by
Éamon de Valera, and in coalition governments by
Joseph Blowick, the leader of
Clann na Talmhan. Under the 1923 Act, busier farmers had to rent extra land under an 11-month or seasonal
conacre system, as longer arrangements could cause an owner to lose his farm by compulsory purchase by the Land Commission. While there were now some 300,000 Irish landowners compared to several thousand in the late nineteenth-century, the basic term for the use of land had reverted to the norm of the 1860s, with no rights to renew a lease and no incentive to improve rented land. By 1980, some in the state were rented annually under conacre, suggesting a new imbalance between mere ownership and the more active farmers. The cost of
agricultural machinery requires larger farm sizes to generate
economies of scale. The Lands Act 1965 was passed to restrict new foreign investment in agriculture, some of which was speculatively based upon the Ireland's planned entry into the
European Economic Community, which occurred in 1973. The EEC's
Four Freedoms allowed for investment within the EEC by any citizen of an EEC member state. This naturally undermined the ethos of the Land Commission, which had processed a further since 1923. By the early 1970s, half of open market land purchases were by non-farmers, and half of those were to buy small sites, typically for building
bungalows. By the 1980s, just before its reform, the Land Commission was a body responsible to the
Department of Agriculture. In 1983, the Commission ceased acquiring land; this signified the start of the end of the commission's reform of Irish land ownership, though freehold transfers of farmland still had to be signed off by the Commission into the 1990s. The Lands Section of the Department of Agriculture was seen as an overgrown entity, employing 750 people in 1983; its budget of
IR£15m included IR£8m for administration costs and only IR£7m for actual land purchase or division. Further purchases were suspended that year by
Paul Connaughton,
Minister of State at the Department of Agriculture. Civil servants working for the Land Commission were reassigned to work on related matters. In proposing this legislation, Minister
Michael O'Kennedy explained the bill's provisions: The act
came into force in 1999. Most of the remaining liabilities and assets were transferred to the
Minister for Agriculture and Food. Many relevant historical records are held by the
National Archives of Ireland. ==Further reading==