I am not sure if this has already been mentioned, and GransNetters living in France can correct me, but I believe that local French Authorities can issue a Licence to Farm? If so, it would seem reasonable for any farmers who have been issued with a Licence to Farm would be exempt from IHT, but that people who own farmland, but do not farm, would be liable for IHT?
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The Farmers Fight
(793 Posts)Infuriated farmers will be protesting against Labour's 'Tractor Tax' opposite Downing Street tomorrow. They are being asked not to bring farm machinery but I hope they clutter up Whitehall with every tractor and combine harvester they can lay their hands on. Reeves claims 'only' 20% of farms will be affected by her latest smash and grab raid but economists say it is nearer 70%. Has it not figured in her brain that if farmers, who already struggle to make ends meet, chuck in the towel, there will be a serious food shortage?
Clarkson and his hideous love of gas guzzling huge cars. His stupid little boys club.
But somebody like Greta Thunberg is to be mocked and derided.
Farmers have had a pretty rubbish deal for a very long time but surely finding a way of helping farmers to generate a better income is better than supporting a tax advantage that benefits some of the richest people in our society and big corporations. How does it help farmers if land that is only fit for grazing sheep sells at £10k an acre? They can't make much money out of it but if it's sold even paying CGT it makes more money being put in the bank. The land, let's say a packet of 10 acres can be rented back to him but the new owner can pass it on to his heirs an asset worth £100k tax free. Even Clarkson admits it's why he initially bought his farm. This is what is happening all over the country, we need to get rid of this anomaly and look at the real reasons farmers are asset rich and income poor.
Trust the French farmers to choose a beautiful tv presenter who has set up her own farm to aid them in their protests. Kudos to them. They certainly do things differently!
I like Jeremy for many reasons, but he has a long way to go yet!
I really do not understand why the U.K. is so obsessed with Inheritance Tax?
It’s a regressive and punitive tax on bereaved families .
The U.K. is a total outlier in having a flat rate 40% IHT (20% for farmers), if we have to have this unfair tax (my opinion obviously) why not have a sliding scale starting from 5% and rising to 40% for the largest and richest estates.
Bearing in mind that the richest people pay little IHT as they pay accountants and lawyers to keep their tax liability to a minimum. It is those in the middle which will now shoulder this burden.
So much sheer bitterness against farmers on here:
Farmers are rich
Farmers should stop moaning and IHT like everyone else
Jeremy Clarkson is a rich farmer, he exemplifies farmers (trying to avoid IHT)
Farmers drive big, posh, gas guzzling cars
Farmers send their children to private schools (really?)
It doesn’t matter if farmers stop farming because big conglomerates grow food too
And more. Such sheer envy and bitterness.
Personally I’m grateful for the farmers who work every day to put food on my plate. And I really prefer my food to be produced by ordinary farmers, not big conglomerates. And I also prefer my food to clock up fewer air miles and British food bought my British people does clock up fewer air miles. It’s really not alright to be eating kiwi fruits from New Zealand and avocados produced God knows where. That’s how we can cut emissions, buy British food!
And it’s reported that Rachel Reeves said yesterday that farmers have to pay for the NHS.
Really?
madalene
And it’s reported that Rachel Reeves said yesterday that farmers have to pay for the NHS.
Really?
There is a letter going into 11 Downing St. today signed by 25+ big retailers.
It is pointing out that the new NI for employers will not encourage the economy to grow, it will have the opposite effect, loss of jobs, loss of investment and higher prices for consumers…
Inheritance tax is not just a UK obsession. Just checked France and Germany, and other EU countries. they all have it, it varies..
For example I checked on the figure in Germany to compare. Land is counted as part of and estate along with any other assets savings shares etc.
Spouses don't of course.
Children don't pay it as long as they live in the family home for 10 years
Rates for those in a Will - Siblings, nieces, nephews, step-parents, relatives by marriage, divorced spouse,
20.000 Euro allowance only then 15% to 43%
Rates for all others 20.000 Euro allowance then 30% to 50%
There is some relief for businesses including farmers but can't ind out how much.
So they start paying inheritance tax at a much lower rate than we do, but the tax is graduated.
I just can’t see the public changing their diets to support British farming madalene, unless there is a war and they have no other options, can you? I do think a more concerted effort should be made for British products to be labelled as such, which would help - but will people, for example, willingly give up avocados for swede, I really don’t think so.
All Rachael Reeves said was that Farmers must pay their fair share like everyone else!
Independent news today
"Rachel Reeves has refused to back down over the planned extension of inheritance tax to agricultural properties,
telling farmers they must pay their share to fund public services including the NHS
This is perfectly reasonable as such, we might disagree on the IT amounts.
Casdon
I just can’t see the public changing their diets to support British farming madalene, unless there is a war and they have no other options, can you? I do think a more concerted effort should be made for British products to be labelled as such, which would help - but will people, for example, willingly give up avocados for swede, I really don’t think so.
I can only speak for myself, but since Covid and multiple lockdowns my shopping list and subsequently what I cook has changed drastically.
I buy local whenever possible along with seasonally.
We do not need Mexican asparagus in December…
I agree Wyllow
Gg13 I'm a little obsessed with IHT because it drives the divide between those who have and those who have not and IMO it creates a very unhealthy society. Just my personal view, of course, but polls do suggest that those countries that promote more equality in terms of wealth are happier and more cohesive than those that don't.
As you say, the really rich will always find a means of keeping as much of their wealth intact, however, it benefits no one if it is put into land apart from driving land values up, which of course is to their advantage. You can't graze more sheep or grow more wheat just because the land has doubled in value! It's a similar problem to house prices. High prices mean some can't get on the housing ladder whilst it funds the advantages already enjoyed by others, driving further inequality.
I live in a Conservative rural community, most of the farms are either small council owned farms that scrape a living or the bigger ones are owned by one of the three large estates in the area. The only one that I know for certain is owned by the farmer is adjacent to me. He rents most of his land out except for a few acres around his home and a few acres which he thinks will eventually get planning. He joked with me the other day that the housing estates built on the outskirts of our little town has put his three children through boarding school!
madalene I'd rather it wasn't big groups of what was 5 or 6 farmers land (or the few really big conglomerates) either, producing our food.
The stranglehold and competition that the big supermarket chains have had on forcing food prices down for years now is what has put small farms out of business, as well as the increased 'flying in" of food from abroad where they not only can grow year round but also rely on very cheap labour.
Small farms that survive are the ones that have been able to diversify and market local products imaginatively, have places to let, have other earners.
My point is like it or not we can't turn the clock back unless most of the public are both able and willing to pay a lot more for food.
GrannyGravy13
Casdon
I just can’t see the public changing their diets to support British farming madalene, unless there is a war and they have no other options, can you? I do think a more concerted effort should be made for British products to be labelled as such, which would help - but will people, for example, willingly give up avocados for swede, I really don’t think so.
I can only speak for myself, but since Covid and multiple lockdowns my shopping list and subsequently what I cook has changed drastically.
I buy local whenever possible along with seasonally.
We do not need Mexican asparagus in December…
It’s Joe Public I’m taking about though GtannyGravy13. I buy British when I can, and use the farmer’s market, too - but the majority of people don’t, and it’s them that would need to change their habits, not people who already shop British. Price has a lot to do with it, but it’s the choice that I suspect is the determining factor.
I think everyone thinks all farmers are struggling and have no money. Some of them are - they have to rent their land from wealthy landowners- it’s these farmers we should support. There are a multitude of issues here- the UK only produces about 59% of food - the only country in Europe that is completely food secure is France and they have more land and better weather. Many of our rivers and waters are polluted by agriculture runoffs, much of our wildlife is killed off by pesticides and loss of habitats. Industrialised units force animals such as chickens to live totally unnatural lives. We need food production but we don’t need to defend everything that is done in the name of farming.
escaped
Trust the French farmers to choose a beautiful tv presenter who has set up her own farm to aid them in their protests. Kudos to them. They certainly do things differently!
I like Jeremy for many reasons, but he has a long way to go yet!
Ha ha. Yes.
...No photos of him in underwear lying on a sandy beach! 
Price has a lot to do with it
Precisely!
There are many young families struggling to put any food on the table - who is speaking up for them? They don’t have the choice that farmers have to sell off a bit of land to make some money.
Yet, farmers object to paying their fair into the country, through tax, in order to help make life a bit fairer for everyone!
madalene
Where was it reported that farmers have to pay for the NHS please?
Everyone wants better services but no one thinks they should have to pay for them. Tesco make billions in profits but are moaning about NI raises.
telling farmers they must pay their share to fund public services including the NHS
Presumably they are paying income tax, NI and employers' NI if they can afford to employ workers?
So is that not their share, in fact the same as so many people pay?
Some, of course do not eg MPs who manage to avoid tax, people who work just a few hours then claim Government money.
Casdon I love swede
mashed with a bit of salt and pepper and a knob of better, yum.
But it’s pointless Greta Thunberg, or Just Stop Oil, or anyone else who likes to virtue signal, protesting about carbon emissions if they’re not prepared to eat British food. I maybe at an advantage here because I love vegetables and dairy. Don’t eat much meat, although I do eat a little. As it happens, I also love avocado and kiwis, but I don’t buy them often, they’re a treat, because I’m very much aware of the air miles.
We all need to be aware. We all need to support British farming.
NotSpaghetti
madalene
Where was it reported that farmers have to pay for the NHS please?
A quick google shows headlines from Telegraph and GB news, to name two, reporting it as "Farmers should pay for NHS"
as opposed to what she actually said which I reported above from the independent
"telling farmers they must pay their share to fund public services including the NHS
clear example of selecting a part sentence to push a right wing narrative.
Casdon I don't think it's choice that makes people buy cheap mass-produced chicken or the cheap imported onions (I saw these in the supermarket last week).
I think it's mainly price. It's been going on so long that many families no longer like "wild" smoked salmon for example- having bought the blander farmed variety which is so much cheaper, many don't even buy a free range chicken anymore as they buy "chicken breasts" which are also blander. I think we are getting used to cheap (and bland) and that becomes normal.
The supermarket drives down prices paid to farmers and people respond by buying the cheaper items. Then they get accustomed to the cheap item and that becomes the "norm"
This is just my view. I've not read any studies on it.
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