Farmers will have to pay 20 per cent of tax on inherited agricultural assets worth more than £1m from April under changes announced in the Budget last Wednesday.
Coupled with increases in workers’ minimum wages and national insurance for employers, farmers say the “tractor tax” will kill off generations-old family farms across the country.
But there are also fears that the controversial move could exacerbate a mental health crisis in the industry, which secretary of state for rural affairs Steve Reed said had the highest suicide rate of any sector in the UK in May.
Stockton West MP Matt Vickers told The Independent that farmers’ lives were being overturned by the measures in the Budget.
He said: “We know that farmers are disproportionately placed to have issues with mental health, we see higher suicide rates because they are out there alone in the elements and all the challenges that come with that.
“When you speak to the people I have spoken to since last Wednesday, and you hear the trauma. Literally their lives are being overturned. That place where they grew up, that place where they farmed all their lives. This has the potential to wipe them out. Pulling the rug like that from people is horrendous.”
He added: “The government just don’t appear to understand what is to be a farmer, they don’t understand that these people often work for very little in return and because they have some large assets, they are wealthy people. These people often have cash flow problems, they work all day and night for a very low return.”
Esta historia es de la edición November 06, 2024 de The Independent.
Comience su prueba gratuita de Magzter GOLD de 7 días para acceder a miles de historias premium seleccionadas y a más de 9,000 revistas y periódicos.
Ya eres suscriptor ? Conectar
Esta historia es de la edición November 06, 2024 de The Independent.
Comience su prueba gratuita de Magzter GOLD de 7 días para acceder a miles de historias premium seleccionadas y a más de 9,000 revistas y periódicos.
Ya eres suscriptor? Conectar
Tyson's another long-since faded fighter who just can't take retirement lying down
On Friday night in Texas, Mike Tyson joined a sad list of men behaving badly in a dangerous sport and he’s not bothered.
Stellar interim job may give Carsley future England shot
Eight debuts, five wins and one regret managing senior side
Late goal gifts Scotland Nations League lifeline
Andy Robertson marked his 80th cap with a sensational stoppage-time winner in Poland to keep Scotland’s hopes alive of staying in the top level of the UEFA Nations League.
Energy bills expected to rise again in the new year
Energy bills could be hiked yet again from 1 January as rising wholesale costs push up prices for households.
THAT'LL BE THE DEITY
Pop psychology superstar Jordan Peterson feels it's high time his voice was heard on the most grandiose of subjects: God. The power of Christ compels Helen Coffey to ask: why?
Queer villains are a cliche we should have moved past
Denzel Washington’s sly bisexual villain is a delight to behold in Gladiator II’, writes Louis Chilton. But when combined with two androgynous tyrants, a troubling trope emerges
The farmers' tax could be a pig in a poke for the country
With the agriculture sector warning the new tax will send us sleepwalking into a food shortage’, Zoé Beaty looks at the reality of an industry in crisis and how we may all pay a price
Trump's tariffs would lower our food standards but we may just have to stomach it
As if the dire predictions for Trump’s second term weren’t scary enough, the Centre for Economic and Business Research (CEBR) has now warned that The Donald’s 20 per cent tariff plan could reduce the UK economy by 0.9 per cent by the end of his administration.
It's not yet World War Three but 'World War Z' has begun
Time was when optimists responded to the imminence of world war with a cocky: \"It'll all be over by Christmas...\"
Australian senator says she will heckle the King again
Australian senator Lidia Thorpe tore up a copy of a motion censuring her for protesting against King Charles during his October visit when she accused him of genocide against Indigenous people.