artie
Sawdust manufacturer.
It maybe. I sold my farm a few years back.I thought set aside was a thing of the past.
It maybe. I sold my farm a few years back.I thought set aside was a thing of the past.
Or abolish inheritance tax…Assume inheritance tax is payable on agricultural land at the current rate of 40% and speculate on the possible consequences.
The alternative - the government acquire the land just as property left to National Trust is exempt from IHT. Assuming their intent would be to ensure the land is used for the benefit of the community for food production, it is open to debate whether they would:
- to be paid some land would almost certainly need to be sold
- it would likely be sold to a business. Individual farmers are less likely as earlier IHT would likely have left them with limited "free" capital anyway
- IHT (as for most other share holdings) would then be payable on the value of shares held, not the land or other underpinning assets.
- the government is effectively extracting capital from the agricultural sector through taxation. There are consequences - possibly lower investment, lower environmental standards, reduced food production as imports become relatively cheaper
Both scenarios require government to legislate controls to to ensure that the land is used for appropriate purposes and to agreed environmental standards, with remedies for non-compliance.
- farm the land directly as a nationalised business, or
- rent out land to individual farmers in much the same way as social housing
It is unclear what material benefits there are to justify making changes to the status quo - it risks degrading the quality of the agricultural sector rather than enhancing it. The answer should depend on the solution best able to optimise value to the community, not driven by political dogma and envy.
Sounds like the next potato famine to me!Assume inheritance tax is payable on agricultural land at the current rate of 40% and speculate on the possible consequences.
The alternative - the government acquire the land just as property left to National Trust is exempt from IHT. Assuming their intent would be to ensure the land is used for the benefit of the community for food production, it is open to debate whether they would:
- to be paid some land would almost certainly need to be sold
- it would likely be sold to a business. Individual farmers are less likely as earlier IHT would likely have left them with limited "free" capital anyway
- IHT (as for most other share holdings) would then be payable on the value of shares held, not the land or other underpinning assets.
- the government is effectively extracting capital from the agricultural sector through taxation. There are consequences - possibly lower investment, lower environmental standards, reduced food production as imports become relatively cheaper
Both scenarios require government to legislate controls to to ensure that the land is used for appropriate purposes and to agreed environmental standards, with remedies for non-compliance.
- farm the land directly as a nationalised business, or
- rent out land to individual farmers in much the same way as social housing
It is unclear what material benefits there are to justify making changes to the status quo - it risks degrading the quality of the agricultural sector rather than enhancing it. The answer should depend on the solution best able to optimise value to the community, not driven by political dogma and envy.
Last year 41000 people paid IHT. Over 30m paid income tax.IHT raised £7.1 billion in the last tax year, or less than 1% of tax receipts. Income tax raised £268 billion by comparison, or around 25% of tax receipts. Ditching IHT would seem a 'relatively' cheap vote winner
Explain your thinking?It’s interesting the death tax created a situation where to shelter your money buying buying land is a good mechanism. If you removed the death tax the incentive / attraction of land ownership for IHT management would disappear and I suspect we would see vast swathes of land being divested as it really isn’t an attractive asset for anything other than fathers and IHT management.
The return on investment is pitiful compared to other investment instruments. If it wasn’t for the IHT, there are better things to put your money into.Explain your thinking?
I'll admit that the tax system in this country has always been well over my head, so I won't fight you on that one...The return on investment is pitiful compared to other investment instruments. If it wasn’t for the IHT, there are better things to put your money into.
WowserS. Our original tax code was 10 pages long. Then govt needed more money. It's now over 3,200. Pages long. If it was just a simple flat tax situation. We could do our taxes in 5 minutes on a postcard size document.The UK tax code is 10 million words and 21,000 pages. The Hong Kong tax code, widely held by tax lawyers to be the most admirably efficient in the world, is 276 pages.
Part of the problem? Shurely not?
I'm sure we've all done it!https://www.theguardian.com/environ...-uk-trillions-retracted-due-to-factual-errors
Interesting. Only a 10,000 fold error.
It's The Gruinard.https://www.theguardian.com/environ...-uk-trillions-retracted-due-to-factual-errors
Interesting. Only a 10,000 fold error.
I have heard it mooted that that's precisely why has been allowed to get so big.When code gets that big, they're are lots oF loop holes etc that rich people that can afford to hire tax lawyers to find and use and circumvent taxes.
It's the Guardian reporting it - they didn't make the error. Or are you suggesting Civitas got it right, and the Guardian misreported it?It's The Gruinard.
Yes, "socialistic" solutions. They would call it dogma of course. More rational than the dogma of divine rights of property owners........ solution best able to optimise value to the community, not driven by political dogma and envy.
The trouble with mistakes like this is that they get embedded in the public consciousness, are are hard to shift. I read a Canadian rant a few years back explaining how EVs were actually way more expensive per mile than ICEs, I was curious, as I imagined Canada had fairly cheap hydro-electric power. Turned out the cost of a kWh had been taken as $1.50, instead of 15c.I'm sure we've all done it!
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