Latest news with #EFRA)Committee


Agriland
23-05-2025
- Business
- Agriland
‘Exempt all farming businesses' from UK inheritance tax
Farming families with a long-term commitment to their businesses can be easily made exempt from the UK expanded inheritance tax measures. This was the clear views expressed by Co. Down-based financial planning specialist, David Hanna, who spoke at the official launch of Newry Show 2025. Hanna said: 'It's obvious that the current Westminster government does not understand farming.' According to Hanna, the expanded inheritance tax changes, referenced by the chancellor last October, are 'the most talked-about Revenue-related measures to have had an impact on farming over the past 40 years'. 'All agricultural businesses are asset-rich and cash-poor. As a consequence, many farming families are worried about their ability to actually pay the tax should they ever be faced with the need to so. 'And there is a ripple effect to be considered within all of this. Many farm businesses will not have the confidence to invest in the future of their businesses. 'We may also see a change in the way that banks deal with their farming clients.' The Newry-based financial consultant believes there is a very clear and concise way for the UK government to amend the new tax measures. 'There is an obvious option for the chancellor to exempt all faming businesses with a clear commitment to maintain the fabric of their businesses for the benefit of future businesses,' Hanna said. 'By taking this approach, she can focus her attention on those individuals and companies that view an investment in land as simply that: an opportunity to dodge the payment of inheritance tax.' Hanna is amongst a growing number of accountants and financial planning specialists who believe that the chancellor still has time to amend the agri-focussed tax changes she specified last autumn Meanwhile, a report by the UK government's Environment, Food, and Rural Affairs (EFRA) Committee is calling on the UK government to delay announcing its final agricultural property relief (APR) and business property relief (BPR) reforms until October 2026, with the measures to come into effect in April 2027. MPs are saying that a pause in the implementation of the reforms would allow for better formulation of tax policy and provide the government with an opportunity to convey a positive long-term vision for farming. Such a development would also protect vulnerable farmers who, according to the report, would have more time to seek appropriate professional advice.
Yahoo
16-05-2025
- Business
- Yahoo
Delay inheritance tax changes until 2027, ministers urged
The UK government has been urged to delay announcing its final agricultural property relief (APR) and business property relief (BPR) reforms until October 2026, to come into effect in April 2027. A report by the cross-party Environment, Food and Rural Affairs (EFRA) Committee has said that a pause in the implementation of these reforms 'would allow for better formulation of tax policy and provide the government with an opportunity to convey a positive long-term vision for farming.' It would also protect vulnerable farmers who would have 'more time to seek appropriate professional advice," they said. MPs praised the government's commitments to backing British produce and supporting farmers, but are concerned that 'high-profile policies have been announced prior to the completion and publication of the strategies and reviews that Defra says will inform and guide its vision.' They have raised concerns that changes announced in the autumn budget last year were made without adequate consultation, impact assessment or affordability assessment. This means that the impact of the changes 'on family farms, land values, tenant farmers, food security and farmers in the devolved administrations' is 'disputed and unclear' with a risk of producing unintended consequences. The report added that the reforms threaten to affect the most vulnerable and that the government should consider alternative measures. Read more: UK economy grows 0.7% in first quarter of the year It comes as a new survey of UK farmers that found that before the budget 70% felt optimistic about the future of their rural businesses, but that number fell to 12% after the chancellor's statement. Meanwhile, 84% of farmers felt that their mental health has been affected, with farmers citing the Sustainable Farming Incentive (SFI) closure and changes to inheritance tax reliefs as the common areas creating concern. The committee supports the government's aim of reforming APR and BPR to close the loophole which allows wealthy investors to buy agricultural land to avoid inheritance tax, but notes that stakeholders and experts have proposed several alternative ways to reform these taxes so as to achieve this objective without harming small family farms, and asks the government to consult on these proposals before publishing its Finance Bill in 2026. The EFRA committee is calling on the government to publish its evaluation of and rationale for following or not following alternative policy measures presented by stakeholders such as the Institute for Fiscal Studies and the National Farmers Union (NFU). It also warned that the sudden closing of the SFI 'affected trust in the government' and 'left many farmers without the funding they expected and at risk of becoming unviable in the period before the next scheme is introduced'. The government has since announced it will allow SFI applications that were in progress within two months of 11 March to progress with restrictions. The committee is also urging for an alternative funding mechanism to be put in place no later than September 2025, to fill the gap in funding for those who missed out on the SFI 2024. MPs said the government should set out, in their response to this report, what the next iteration of SFI will look like and the date it will be open for applications. In January, Defra announced its plans to publish a 25-year Farming Roadmap. MPs say that in this, 'the government should urgently set out its vision for the farming sector, achieving food security and the future of the Farming and Countryside Programme.' The report says: 'The 25-year Farming Roadmap should bring together Defra farming policy and programmes into a single vision outlining how they will work together to achieve measurable outcomes for food security and the environment.' Alistair Carmichael MP and chair of the EFRA committee, said: 'The Committee has taken its work extremely seriously in developing this report and in agreeing our findings. There is an opportunity here to rebuild trust and confidence in the farming sector and I hope that the government will take our recommendations seriously. Read more: Eurozone economic growth weaker than expected amid Trump's tariff turmoil 'The way in which the government has behaved over recent months has clearly negatively affected the confidence and wellbeing of farmers. Changes to APR and BPR in the autumn budget, the sudden closure of the Capital Grants scheme in November 2024, and the abrupt ending of SFI applications in March have all led farmers to feel that they cannot rely on the government to live up to its commitments. "The government, however, seems to be dismissing farmers' concerns and ignoring the strength of feeling evidenced in the months of protests that saw tractors converge on Westminster and up and down the country. 'We have seen that Defra's communications with farmers have been poor, with confusing and sometimes contradictory messaging. There has been a lack of adequate consultation. Policies affecting farmers have been announced without due consideration or explanation of their impact or their rationale. 'Farmers ought to be the essential element in the government's plans both to achieve food security and to restore and protect the environment. When they make decisions for their businesses, farmers have to plan for the long term — but the landscape they are operating in currently is unclear. Farmers urgently need clarity, certainty and advance notice of changes — they cannot be expected to rethink their businesses on a whim. It is essential that Defra focuses on rebuilding trust through good-faith communications with the sector.'