Íæż½ã½ã

NFU to organise mass lobby to ensure farmers' voices are heard on APR

The mass lobby of Parliament will take place in Westminster on November 19

Rachael Brown
clock • 2 min read
NFU to organise mass lobby to ensure farmers' voices are heard on APR

NFU say there are determined to make farming members voices heard, after many in the industry shared their ‘frustration' over the Chancellor's changes to Agricultural Property Relief in the Budget.

Budget

In a letter to its members, the NFU president Tom Bradshaw outlined that a mass lobby of Parliament will take place in Westminster on November 19 to engage with MPs on the issue of APR, but this time in Parliament.

READ NOW: Autumn Budget: 'Ill thought-out' APR changes will lead to lasting damage, warns NFU Cymru

Agricultural Property Relief

The union said it wants to bring to life the impacts of this policy change on farms, on British farming and on food supply and urge the Chancellor Rachel Reeves to reconsider these measures.

READ NOW: Autumn Budget: APR overhaul garners furious response from farming industry

NFU president Tom Bradshaw said: "Íæż½ã½ã and growers have been left reeling from the changes announced in the budget which demonstrate a fundamental lack of understanding of how the British farming sector is shaped and managed. The current plans to change APR and BPR need to be overturned and fast.

"Íæż½ã½ã are rightly angry and concerned about their future and the future of their family farms, having been reassured by minsters in the lead up to the Budget that APR and BPR changes were not on the table."

He said the Treasury's figures which claim this will only affect one in four British farms are misleading.

"The £1 million cap to APR shows how little this government understands the sector. Very few viable farms would be worth under £1m, but lots of smallholdings and houses with a few acres let for grazing might be. The asset value of genuine food-producing farms will be high, given the size they need to be to remain viable businesses; but that's the value of the asset, it doesn't reflect its profitability which is often, and increasingly so, very low.

"Clearly the government does not understand that family farms are not only small farms, and that just because a farm is an asset, it does not mean those who work it are wealthy. Every penny the Chancellor saves from this will come directly from the next generation having to break up their family farm. It simply must not happen."

He added MPs needed to understand the consequences of their actions.

"British farmers will ask their MPs to look them in the eye and tell them whether they support this.

"There is still time for the government to accept they have got this wrong, and my message to ministers is that they should do the right thing and reverse this awful family farm tax."

 

2019 Kubota MI25 GX-IV c/w LA2255 loader.

£±Ê°¿´¡

2019 Suzuki King Quad 500

£±Ê°¿´¡

2001 case MX 170

£±Ê°¿´¡

More on Politics

Over 42,000 English and Scottish farms to be hit by Inheritance Tax changes, says AHDB

Over 42,000 English and Scottish farms to be hit by Inheritance Tax changes, says AHDB

Cereals farms will be hit hardest by the proposed changes to Agricultural Property Relief and Business Property Relief

Alex Black
clock 28 January 2025 • 2 min read
MSPs seek restoration of Scottish agricultural funding in light of IHT changes

MSPs seek restoration of Scottish agricultural funding in light of IHT changes

MSPs have written a joint letter to Chancellor Rachel Reeves outlining how the Autumn Budget could impact farmers in Scotland

clock 27 January 2025 • 3 min read
AIMS calls for total ban on personal imports of meat products

AIMS calls for total ban on personal imports of meat products

The trade association said this action was ‘imperative' to protect the nation's livestock from imminent disease threats

Rachael Brown
clock 26 January 2025 • 1 min read