This seems a bit arbitrary. Why would owning a land based business be any different from any other type of family business?Labour still fail to get it.
The change that was needed is simple. If you own the land and farm it, it is exempt.
If you own the land and rent it out, it should be liable to Inheritance Tax at the same rate as every other investment.
That immediately removes working farms, but hits those who invested in land for the tax exemption.
Labour still fail to get it.
The change that was needed is simple. If you own the land and farm it, it is exempt.
If you own the land and rent it out, it should be liable to Inheritance Tax at the same rate as every other investment.
That immediately removes working farms, but hits those who invested in land for the tax exemption.
This seems a bit arbitrary. Why would owning a land based business be any different from any other type of family business?
Labour still fail to get it.
The change that was needed is simple. If you own the land and farm it, it is exempt.
If you own the land and rent it out, it should be liable to Inheritance Tax at the same rate as every other investment.
That immediately removes working farms, but hits those who invested in land for the tax exemption.
This seems a bit arbitrary. Why would owning a land based business be any different from any other type of family business?
Labour still fail to get it.
The change that was needed is simple. If you own the land and farm it, it is exempt.
If you own the land and rent it out, it should be liable to Inheritance Tax at the same rate as every other investment.
That immediately removes working farms, but hits those who invested in land for the tax exemption.
If you rent the land out, it is an investment, and should be taxed as such. Just like any commercial property investment.
Dyson doesn't farm much of his overall estate, but those acres he does farm either driving the tractor himself or by employing a farm management company should be exempt. He is putting up his own money to farm those acres.
Clarkson is actually putting his own money into the farm so his farm should be exempt - he isn't renting the land out to another business.
Labour shouldn't have messed around with Business Property Relief either
My scheme isn't 'very arbitary' - it's simple and logical.
It's also pretty much the solution proposed by the NFU I think.
Not really, the likes of Clarkson and Dyson technically farm the land themselves (albeit using paid labour). They aren’t renting the land out and they didn’t buy the farms primarily to become farmers. It’s a tax dodge for them and they don’t like the loophole being closed. Unfortunately closing it has also affected ‘real’ farmers.
Still doesn't explain why a farming business should be treated differently from any other business.
All business should be doing similar financial planning. If farmers are a bit lax then that is on them. If it's a tax dodge then boo hoo.
Still doesn't explain why a farming business should be treated differently from any other business.
All business should be doing similar financial planning. If farmers are a bit lax then that is on them. If it's a tax dodge then boo hoo.
The solution isn't to let farmers off tax liabilities, it's to pay them a decent income for producing food or otherwise acting in the public interest (rewilding or whatever). The supermarkets have been allowed to get pretty much complete control of prices paid to farmers, and the farming subsidies are a mess in both concept and execution. The trouble is that it's a tiny percentage of GDP, so has little clout with the treasury.