Gli agricoltori ignorano il divieto dei trattori e portano la protesta contro l’imposta di successione a Westminster

    https://news.sky.com/story/farmers-ignore-tractor-ban-and-bring-inheritance-tax-protest-to-westminster-13475555

    di topotaul

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    13 commenti

    1. Cailltetrodaire on

      Good for them. Too many people fail (or refuse) to understand that most farmers are cash poor and are only so “wealthy” on paper because of inflated land/property prices. There are a ton of boomers who are rich on paper because the house that they bought in 1967 for a handshake and a cornetto is now worth £1.5mil.

      Also, let it not be suppressed that Starmer is [in bed with BlackRock](https://x.com/Keir_Starmer/status/1859682871876911310?lang=en) and is taxing these family farms to force their descendants to sell their farms to BlackRock.

      **Edit: At time of writing we’re at about a downvote a minute, with quite a few predictable, disingenuous replies. Note that none of them address the BlackRock issue. I think saying “BlackRock” triggers something in the algorithm, so please, do your duty and say it as much as possible.**

    2. middleofaldi on

      If you offered most people the chance to quit their job and become a millionaire overnight they’d bite your hand off.

      That’s the choice these farmers are facing when they complain they might have to sell their land to pay the tax. Farmers are a privileged class, and maybe that’s fine but we should at least be honest about it

    3. Moggy1990 on

      Never let the government control the food.

      They bankrupt the farms the buy the land.

    4. RisingDeadMan0 on

      “farmers” or wealthy landowners who bought farmland to avoid IHT now protesting that the loop hole is being closed

      But agree that it needs to change, as it hurts real farmers too, but the intention is good to hit the right people

      reality being if people were going to sell the land they could but some people actually take pride in being farmers and want to continue being farmers, and we shouldnt be hurting these people.

    5. srdgbychkncsr on

      It’s hereditary wealth at the end of the day, landed gentry but there is work involved to realise it. It should be taxable like anyone else’s inheritance.

      The argument of “well who will grow the food if they can’t inherit tax free then?” argument has worn thin with me too. Imagine the owner of a logistics firm arguing they should be able to pass on their company tax-free because no lorry drivers, no food… You can apply their rhetoric to so many examples.

    6. BaggyBloke on

      Entitled, ignorant pricks.

      They claim that us non-farmers just don’t understand country ways. They demand that they not be treated like everyone else because of the selfless sacrifices they make, toiling in penury to keep the heart of the nation pumping.

      Well no. It is they, in their little rural bubble, who don’t understand the country they live in. Life is tough for everyone. They are not heroes. They have no God-given right to anoint themselves and their descendants to be forever tax exempt guardians of the land.

      They are entitled, wealthy land owners who bitched and moaned so much when the Brexit they voted for stopped them exploiting cheap foreign labour, that special rules were made to let them keep doing so. A Brexit, by the way, they voted for in the hope of increasing their own profits by raising food prices to us tax payers.

      They claim to be custodians of the countryside, but will maximize profits by polluting our rivers, chopping down our hedgerows, culling our badgers and only doing just enough to trouser the juicy subsidies.

      They will flog their precious land at inflated prices to tax dodging millionaires/TV presenters for easy profits, but heaven forbid selling some to pay their fair share of tax.

      If you can’t make enough money from your millions of pounds of assets to pay your taxes – sell them. Put the money in the bank and live comfortably off the income. Let someone else have a go at using the land productively.

    7. did we not pass draconian anti protest laws recently to stop this very thing.

      I dont agree with the laws, but if they are applied to climate/palestinian support protestors, then they should be applied equally to farmers.

      arrest them, lock them up for 2 years like the JSO lot.

    8. jack5624 on

      All the people congratulating the tax increase on farmers care more about bitterness than food security.

    9. Sluggybeef on

      Thus is one of those things we will have to wait and see on, but from within the industry looking at it, its going to completely cripple a lot of the arable farms.

      This IHT relief was brough in in the 70s because it was crippling smaller family farms that couldn’t afford to carry on.

      Were now one of the only countries to have no inheritance protections on farmland, could be a bumpy few years for agriculture.

    10. Hopefully enough fines are going to be issued to cover the costs of the police time spent on the pricks.

    11. RisingDeadMan0 on

      i do wonder if people are just bots, happy to kill british farming off or if they realise the policy needs adjusting so that it wont hit farmers but will hit IHT loophole folks

    12. Spamgrenade on

      No money to pay tax but can afford massively expensive transporters to get their very very expensive tractors into London.

      None of these particular farmers are impoverished carrot crunchers.

    13. RacerRovr on

      So many people on here really don’t get why farmers are so angry. The problem is that land prices are hyper inflated, so most commercial farms are worth a few million pounds, yet only turn annual profits of around £50-70000, despite having to support multiple people.

      The problem lies when a farmer dies, their child simply cannot afford to pay hundreds of thousands in tax, and is forced to sell the farm. The only people who can afford to buy the farm are the ultra wealthy, therefore more land is going to end up in the hands of the rich.

      A simple solution would be, you don’t pay inheritance tax unless you sell the farm. If you take ownership and continue to operate it, you shouldn’t have to pay the tax. This would close the loophole of people buying farms to give to their children, who then sell it, therefore avoiding inheritance tax

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