Farming News - CLA calls on inheritance tax review to ensure system is Brexit ready
News
Most Read
- 1.Farmers could be caught by HMRC’s multimillion pound tax crackdown
- 2.Family farms under threat of extinction
- 3.Countryside Alliance accuses the BBC of double standards
- 4.HMRC’s appeal on the rights of farmers to reclaim VAT on the purchase of SFPEs has been rejected
- 5.Time to Revisit Solar PV for Farmers & Agri Businesses - Still an Opportunity Worth Exploring !
CLA calls on inheritance tax review to ensure system is Brexit ready
The CLA has set out how small changes to the administration and interpretation of inheritance tax rules can help to ensure businesses are ready to cope with the inevitable changes that Brexit will bring.
image expired
A review, set up by the Chancellor and conducted by the Office of Tax Simplification (OTS), is looking specifically at the ease or complexity of legislative rules around inheritance tax with the aim of recommending improvements.
The CLA has set out a number of improvements that can be made to the system, most notably providing more time and support for families to put their Estates in order following a death, and suggested important clarifications to the rules to ensure key diversifications of farming businesses, such as holiday lettings, qualify for vital inheritance tax relief. The CLA is also calling for the Government to make clear that land on which environmental or other public goods activities are taking place, is explicitly included within the scope of agricultural property relief.
CLA President Tim Breitmeyer said: “This is an important review at a crucial time. With so much uncertainty surrounding farmers and other land based rural businesses, the OTS can help by recommending clarity, flexibility and better administration of the inheritance tax regime to the Chancellor.
“Brexit will bring significant and fundamental change for many land based businesses across the countryside. In order to respond, many will need to invest to increase profitability, productivity and accelerate growth. This includes more farm businesses seeking new income streams from activities like tourism that sit alongside their core farming business. It is important that those who do this are not penalised by current inheritance tax rules.
“Also, as government policy clearly identifies a switch to encouraging more public good activities on rural land as a core policy objective, it must ensure that landowners who respond do not get penalised by the inheritance tax system. For example, land dedicated to environmental schemes must benefit from the same reliefs as agricultural land.
“Faced with the uncertainties and opportunities of Brexit, it is for each rural business to take its destiny in its own hands. What the Government can do is ensure that the tax regime is fit for purpose and helps businesses to have the confidence to invest and grow.”
Click here to read the CLA submission in response to the OTS call for evidence.