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[News] Farmers



Rdodge30

Well-known member
Dec 30, 2022
617
You know you're not the first to have thought that :wink:

View attachment 192690
Well we will see where all the growth comes from this parliament won’t we? My prediction there won’t be any growth from what I’ve seen so far …. It will almost certainly be the fault of the previous government and Brexit though 🙄
 




Herr Tubthumper

Well-known member
NSC Patron
Jul 11, 2003
62,677
The Fatherland
Are you arguing that businesses with expensive propertyshould be forced to sell up as well? And if so, is it a good thing?

Perhaps something could be done on the basis that land is passed on free of IHT, but if and when it is sold, CGT is charged on the original, presumably negligible, cost.
Of course I’m not arguing this. I'm challenging the idea a business sitting on a big asset with marginal profit is unique.

I believe your second point is addressed by setting up as a LTD company, albeit addressed by corp tax.
 
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abc

Well-known member
Jan 6, 2007
1,389
Why did Margaret Thatcher exempt the farmers in 1984, and prior to that, what was the criteria for IHT for farms? Was is 40% like the rest?
A good question that I didn't know the answer to, so I emailed a friend's father who was (now retired) a rural land agent around that time. I've simply cut and pasted his reply - its long but maybe of interest:

Farmland values had been largely static throughout the 20th century until the 1980s when non farmers started to see land as an investment, initially by City traders in order to avoid capital gains tax (via roll over relief). Up to this point farmland values roughly reflected their income earning capacity when farmed. This was the start of making farmland unaffordable for ordinary farmers. It had the greatest impact on the poorer farmland as the land quality was irrelevant to the outside investor and values increased by the largest percentage where farming was financially most challenging, such as on hill farms and crofts.

In 1984 the Conservative Government responded to lobbying from the farming unions by exempting farmland for IHT. Prior to the 1980s, passing land down to the next generation was not excessively challenging financially because value were low and the tax due was manageable without selling the farm or its assets. The breaking of the link between land values and productive capacity reversed this and the IHT exemption was introduced to stop the breakup of, in particular, family farms. It is interesting to note that there was no concern about food security at this time with butter and grain mountains the order of the time. The motivation appeared to be one of ‘fairness’, though of course this is something of a subjective noun.

Ironically the IHT exemption created another very attractive tax planning tool for non farmers and land values increased further and faster. In terms of farming succession this didn’t matter due to the exemption rules but the link between food production and land values was distorted further. I believe land values in Sussex for farmland without development potential hovers around £15000 per acre today. For farmers to buy land, pay interest on a loan and make a small profit, the same acre would need to fall to a value of c.£2000/acre. Extraordinarily, this is less than was required in the 1980s.

You didn’t actually ask me my view on the budget change vis a vis IHT but I will give it to you anyway! The IHT exemption has enabled outside wealthy investors and institutions to buy up land entirely for tax mitigating purposes. This has massively distorted values and the taxpayer has missed out on possibly billions of pounds of revenue over the last 40 years. It is, to me, quite understandable that any government would want to act against what is ultimately a consequence that was never intended when the exemption was created.

However, I do believe there is a justification and a need to maintain the exemption for what I might loosely term a ‘proper farmer’. I am sure there are various potential methods available to the chancellor, especially one that has access to everyone’s tax returns.
 


Rdodge30

Well-known member
Dec 30, 2022
617
A good question that I didn't know the answer to, so I emailed a friend's father who was (now retired) a rural land agent around that time. I've simply cut and pasted his reply - its long but maybe of interest:

Farmland values had been largely static throughout the 20th century until the 1980s when non farmers started to see land as an investment, initially by City traders in order to avoid capital gains tax (via roll over relief). Up to this point farmland values roughly reflected their income earning capacity when farmed. This was the start of making farmland unaffordable for ordinary farmers. It had the greatest impact on the poorer farmland as the land quality was irrelevant to the outside investor and values increased by the largest percentage where farming was financially most challenging, such as on hill farms and crofts.

In 1984 the Conservative Government responded to lobbying from the farming unions by exempting farmland for IHT. Prior to the 1980s, passing land down to the next generation was not excessively challenging financially because value were low and the tax due was manageable without selling the farm or its assets. The breaking of the link between land values and productive capacity reversed this and the IHT exemption was introduced to stop the breakup of, in particular, family farms. It is interesting to note that there was no concern about food security at this time with butter and grain mountains the order of the time. The motivation appeared to be one of ‘fairness’, though of course this is something of a subjective noun.

Ironically the IHT exemption created another very attractive tax planning tool for non farmers and land values increased further and faster. In terms of farming succession this didn’t matter due to the exemption rules but the link between food production and land values was distorted further. I believe land values in Sussex for farmland without development potential hovers around £15000 per acre today. For farmers to buy land, pay interest on a loan and make a small profit, the same acre would need to fall to a value of c.£2000/acre. Extraordinarily, this is less than was required in the 1980s.

You didn’t actually ask me my view on the budget change vis a vis IHT but I will give it to you anyway! The IHT exemption has enabled outside wealthy investors and institutions to buy up land entirely for tax mitigating purposes. This has massively distorted values and the taxpayer has missed out on possibly billions of pounds of revenue over the last 40 years. It is, to me, quite understandable that any government would want to act against what is ultimately a consequence that was never intended when the exemption was created.

However, I do believe there is a justification and a need to maintain the exemption for what I might loosely term a ‘proper farmer’. I am sure there are various potential methods available to the chancellor, especially one that has access to everyone’s tax returns.
Quite possibly the most informative post on this thread thank you
 


Questions

Habitual User
Oct 18, 2006
25,495
Worthing
My knowledge of farmers comes from The Archers and Alan Partridge…… I don’t like flat caps if that’s relevant.
 




Thunder Bolt

Silly old bat
A good question that I didn't know the answer to, so I emailed a friend's father who was (now retired) a rural land agent around that time. I've simply cut and pasted his reply - its long but maybe of interest:

Farmland values had been largely static throughout the 20th century until the 1980s when non farmers started to see land as an investment, initially by City traders in order to avoid capital gains tax (via roll over relief). Up to this point farmland values roughly reflected their income earning capacity when farmed. This was the start of making farmland unaffordable for ordinary farmers. It had the greatest impact on the poorer farmland as the land quality was irrelevant to the outside investor and values increased by the largest percentage where farming was financially most challenging, such as on hill farms and crofts.

In 1984 the Conservative Government responded to lobbying from the farming unions by exempting farmland for IHT. Prior to the 1980s, passing land down to the next generation was not excessively challenging financially because value were low and the tax due was manageable without selling the farm or its assets. The breaking of the link between land values and productive capacity reversed this and the IHT exemption was introduced to stop the breakup of, in particular, family farms. It is interesting to note that there was no concern about food security at this time with butter and grain mountains the order of the time. The motivation appeared to be one of ‘fairness’, though of course this is something of a subjective noun.

Ironically the IHT exemption created another very attractive tax planning tool for non farmers and land values increased further and faster. In terms of farming succession this didn’t matter due to the exemption rules but the link between food production and land values was distorted further. I believe land values in Sussex for farmland without development potential hovers around £15000 per acre today. For farmers to buy land, pay interest on a loan and make a small profit, the same acre would need to fall to a value of c.£2000/acre. Extraordinarily, this is less than was required in the 1980s.

You didn’t actually ask me my view on the budget change vis a vis IHT but I will give it to you anyway! The IHT exemption has enabled outside wealthy investors and institutions to buy up land entirely for tax mitigating purposes. This has massively distorted values and the taxpayer has missed out on possibly billions of pounds of revenue over the last 40 years. It is, to me, quite understandable that any government would want to act against what is ultimately a consequence that was never intended when the exemption was created.

However, I do believe there is a justification and a need to maintain the exemption for what I might loosely term a ‘proper farmer’. I am sure there are various potential methods available to the chancellor, especially one that has access to everyone’s tax returns.
It’s a good answer and explains the £1M exemption excluding the farm house, and the £1M per spouse, so the smaller family farms won’t suffer, but the huge estates will have to pay.
 


dsr-burnley

Well-known member
Aug 15, 2014
2,625
Of course I’m not arguing this. I'm challenging the idea a business sitting on a big asset with marginal profit is unique.

I believe your second point is addressed by setting up as a LTD company, albeit addressed by corp tax.
No, because if you die owning a limited company worth £x million it is subject to IHT in the same way as if you owned property and business worth the same amount.
 


dazzer6666

Well-known member
NSC Patron
Mar 27, 2013
55,514
Burgess Hill
A good question that I didn't know the answer to, so I emailed a friend's father who was (now retired) a rural land agent around that time. I've simply cut and pasted his reply - its long but maybe of interest:

Farmland values had been largely static throughout the 20th century until the 1980s when non farmers started to see land as an investment, initially by City traders in order to avoid capital gains tax (via roll over relief). Up to this point farmland values roughly reflected their income earning capacity when farmed. This was the start of making farmland unaffordable for ordinary farmers. It had the greatest impact on the poorer farmland as the land quality was irrelevant to the outside investor and values increased by the largest percentage where farming was financially most challenging, such as on hill farms and crofts.

In 1984 the Conservative Government responded to lobbying from the farming unions by exempting farmland for IHT. Prior to the 1980s, passing land down to the next generation was not excessively challenging financially because value were low and the tax due was manageable without selling the farm or its assets. The breaking of the link between land values and productive capacity reversed this and the IHT exemption was introduced to stop the breakup of, in particular, family farms. It is interesting to note that there was no concern about food security at this time with butter and grain mountains the order of the time. The motivation appeared to be one of ‘fairness’, though of course this is something of a subjective noun.

Ironically the IHT exemption created another very attractive tax planning tool for non farmers and land values increased further and faster. In terms of farming succession this didn’t matter due to the exemption rules but the link between food production and land values was distorted further. I believe land values in Sussex for farmland without development potential hovers around £15000 per acre today. For farmers to buy land, pay interest on a loan and make a small profit, the same acre would need to fall to a value of c.£2000/acre. Extraordinarily, this is less than was required in the 1980s.

You didn’t actually ask me my view on the budget change vis a vis IHT but I will give it to you anyway! The IHT exemption has enabled outside wealthy investors and institutions to buy up land entirely for tax mitigating purposes. This has massively distorted values and the taxpayer has missed out on possibly billions of pounds of revenue over the last 40 years. It is, to me, quite understandable that any government would want to act against what is ultimately a consequence that was never intended when the exemption was created.

However, I do believe there is a justification and a need to maintain the exemption for what I might loosely term a ‘proper farmer’. I am sure there are various potential methods available to the chancellor, especially one that has access to everyone’s tax returns.
Nailed it. I reckon this will be re-thought and a clear (as far as is possible) distinction brought in between 'real' farmers and Tabitha and Toby's hedge fund.
 




nicko31

Well-known member
Jan 7, 2010
18,570
Gods country fortnightly
100 % with the farmers on this one.
Seriously embarressed now that I put my X next to the Labour Candidate in my area (who didn't win), Starmer and his cronies are slowly ripping the heart of the country (which previous Governments had begun of course)
It’s a fringe issue that affects hardly anyone. Usual suspects jumping in the bandwagon

If they’re really unhappy gift the farm and the IGT will be tapered over 7 years

Gonna write to HMRC to see if they’ve give me 10 years interest free credit on what I owe them.
 
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nicko31

Well-known member
Jan 7, 2010
18,570
Gods country fortnightly
Well we will see where all the growth comes from this parliament won’t we? My prediction there won’t be any growth from what I’ve seen so far …. It will almost certainly be the fault of the previous government and Brexit though 🙄
What would you do to get growth going ?
 






Bodian

Well-known member
May 3, 2012
14,209
Cumbria
A good question that I didn't know the answer to, so I emailed a friend's father who was (now retired) a rural land agent around that time. I've simply cut and pasted his reply - its long but maybe of interest:

Farmland values had been largely static throughout the 20th century until the 1980s when non farmers started to see land as an investment, initially by City traders in order to avoid capital gains tax (via roll over relief). Up to this point farmland values roughly reflected their income earning capacity when farmed. This was the start of making farmland unaffordable for ordinary farmers. It had the greatest impact on the poorer farmland as the land quality was irrelevant to the outside investor and values increased by the largest percentage where farming was financially most challenging, such as on hill farms and crofts.

In 1984 the Conservative Government responded to lobbying from the farming unions by exempting farmland for IHT. Prior to the 1980s, passing land down to the next generation was not excessively challenging financially because value were low and the tax due was manageable without selling the farm or its assets. The breaking of the link between land values and productive capacity reversed this and the IHT exemption was introduced to stop the breakup of, in particular, family farms. It is interesting to note that there was no concern about food security at this time with butter and grain mountains the order of the time. The motivation appeared to be one of ‘fairness’, though of course this is something of a subjective noun.

Ironically the IHT exemption created another very attractive tax planning tool for non farmers and land values increased further and faster. In terms of farming succession this didn’t matter due to the exemption rules but the link between food production and land values was distorted further. I believe land values in Sussex for farmland without development potential hovers around £15000 per acre today. For farmers to buy land, pay interest on a loan and make a small profit, the same acre would need to fall to a value of c.£2000/acre. Extraordinarily, this is less than was required in the 1980s.

You didn’t actually ask me my view on the budget change vis a vis IHT but I will give it to you anyway! The IHT exemption has enabled outside wealthy investors and institutions to buy up land entirely for tax mitigating purposes. This has massively distorted values and the taxpayer has missed out on possibly billions of pounds of revenue over the last 40 years. It is, to me, quite understandable that any government would want to act against what is ultimately a consequence that was never intended when the exemption was created.

However, I do believe there is a justification and a need to maintain the exemption for what I might loosely term a ‘proper farmer’. I am sure there are various potential methods available to the chancellor, especially one that has access to everyone’s tax returns.
Thanks - that's really interesting.
 
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Rdodge30

Well-known member
Dec 30, 2022
617
What would you do to get growth going ?
As a layman my understanding is limited to be sure. To increase growth in the economy then, as the government has said, we need to increase productivity in transport, industry, retail and agriculture. As I understand it productivity in it’s simplest terms is input against output and if you increase wage bills and tax bills then output must increase by exactly the same amount just for productivity to remain the same.

So I’m scratching my head so far at the government’s policies on tax and wages.

Without any doubt whatsoever the extra costs to the retail businesses in particular will result in reduced future wage growth for staff and increased prices for customers.
 


PILTDOWN MAN

Well-known member
NSC Patron
Sep 15, 2004
19,592
Hurst Green
You don't need planning permission to change the deeds. If the farmhouse was the original and there's not been planning permission to build new homes or other non- agricultural buildings or create new planning units, there are unlikely to be planning conditions restricting the occupier of a home to an agricultural worker. And over the last few years, permitted development rights have been hugely increased to allow conversion of agricultural buildings to homes and other uses without a full planning application.
OK and I know this if you separate a dwelling from a farm and then attempt to get a new house on the remaining farm, forget it.
 




Bry Nylon

Test your smoke alarm
Helpful Moderator
Jul 21, 2003
20,572
Playing snooker
Nailed it. I reckon this will be re-thought and a clear (as far as is possible) distinction brought in between 'real' farmers and Tabitha and Toby's hedge fund.
Exactly this, is what I heard this evening.

Apparently, lights are burning long in Whitehall this evening as Treasury and Ag Ministry officials are frantically working through ‘mitigations’ that will be made available to genuine farmers, so long as NFU don’t claim a victory or call it a ‘climb down.’ Special Agricultural Exemption seems to be the term of choice at the moment.

Happily, they have a bit of time to finess the finer details, as the policy doesn’t take effect until 2027 - plus Treasury officials are apparently still locked away with Wes Streeting, attempting to find a nimble and elegant way of unwinding the imminent NI increase for GP surgeries and care homes.

It’s fair to say this issue has caught the government on the hop and created more noise than they had envisaged, something both the Ministry of Ag and DEFRA have been keen to point out in private - especially as the Treasury didn’t give sight of the IHT measure or the questionable numbers they used to base it on - to either department until the night before the budget statement.
 


nicko31

Well-known member
Jan 7, 2010
18,570
Gods country fortnightly
As a layman my understanding is limited to be sure. To increase growth in the economy then, as the government has said, we need to increase productivity in transport, industry, retail and agriculture. As I understand it productivity in it’s simplest terms is input against output and if you increase wage bills and tax bills then output must increase by exactly the same amount just for productivity to remain the same.

So I’m scratching my head so far at the government’s policies on tax and wages.

Without any doubt whatsoever the extra costs to the retail businesses in particular will result in reduced future wage growth for staff and increased prices for customers.
To be honest I’m not at all surprised how things are working out.

Labour’s uber cautious approach in their manifesto has lead them to boxing themselves in limiting their options.

They’ve inherited an economy has is an no longer trade intensive and has public services on its knees. Unless we want the latter to collapse we’re gonna have to pay more tax.

All things considered I give them 7.5/10 so far. They are still sorting a lot of things out, their Comms could be better though
 


Rdodge30

Well-known member
Dec 30, 2022
617
Unless we want the latter to collapse we’re gonna have to pay more tax
Investment into the economy from the Government comes through taxation but in my opinion they should be seeking, encouraging and enabling private investment as well.
 


Bodian

Well-known member
May 3, 2012
14,209
Cumbria
Exactly this, is what I heard this evening.

Apparently, lights are burning long in Whitehall this evening as Treasury and Ag Ministry officials are frantically working through ‘mitigations’ that will be made available to genuine farmers, so long as NFU don’t claim a victory or call it a ‘climb down.’ Special Agricultural Exemption seems to be the term of choice at the moment.

Happily, they have a bit of time to finess the finer details, as the policy doesn’t take effect until 2027 - plus Treasury officials are apparently still locked away with Wes Streeting, attempting to find a nimble and elegant way of unwinding the imminent NI increase for GP surgeries and care homes.

It’s fair to say this issue has caught the government on the hop and created more noise than they had envisaged, something both the Ministry of Ag and DEFRA have been keen to point out in private - especially as the Treasury didn’t give sight of the IHT measure or the questionable numbers they used to base it on - to either department until the night before the budget statement.
 




Bozza

You can change this
Helpful Moderator
Jul 4, 2003
57,283
Back in Sussex

The Treasury already pushed back on that exact request from Defra over a week ago.

“All ministers support the policy and it will not change.”

 


Bodian

Well-known member
May 3, 2012
14,209
Cumbria
The Treasury already pushed back on that exact request from Defra over a week ago.

“All ministers support the policy and it will not change.”

Hadn't had the protest then though - nothing like a bit of action and media coverage to focus their minds.
 


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