Opinion Farmers have hoarded land for too long. Inheritance tax will bring new life to rural Britain

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Prices and rents will fall under Rachel Reeves’ plans, enabling a younger generation with new ideas to enter the field​

Will Hutton
Sun 17 Nov 2024 02.00 EST

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Illustration by Dominic McKenzie.

One of the baleful dimensions of our times is the way that the conversation about what constitutes the good society is framed by the rich and their interests. A conception of the common good withers; instead it is replaced by the existential importance of private wealth, private interests and private ownership to societal health. Nowhere is this more exposed than in the debate over taxation, and in particular the taxation of inherited wealth – as the debate over the past fortnight has dramatised.

Half a million people die every year. Under the reforms to inheritance tax relief on agricultural land proposed in the budget, about 500 individuals who inherit land worth more than £2m (£3m if they were married to the deceased) will join the rest of society and have inheritance tax levied on their bequest – albeit at half the rate, with an enlarged exemption and 10 years to pay it, concessions not made to the rest of us. How fortunate and privileged are they?

Yet ever since, the National Farmers Union, Historic Houses, the Tory party, the rightwing media and, inevitably, Elon Musk have behaved as if the move represents a new communist dictatorship. Edward Stanley, the 19th Earl of Derby, denizen of Merseyside’s Knowsley Hall where his family has lived since 1385, represented their united view. “Taking 20% of a business away every generation is just a shockingly awful concept for a government that wants growth,” he told the Financial Times. Positioning himself as a wealth-creating small business, he insisted it “would kill off farming and heritage businesses” like his. According to the lobby, a new age of Jacobin terror has been unleashed – production will collapse, rural Britain will be devastated, and all for a trivial amount of money. Rarely have 500 very privileged people got so hysterical – and commanded so much attention.

There is no acknowledgment of the potential wider benefits that go beyond the non-trivial contribution the tax will make to relieving the crisis in public services. The hoarding of land that has gone on since the bung was introduced by Margaret Thatcher in 1984, which has so steadily driven up land prices and farmers’ rents, will at last be checked as some of the larger estates are obliged to sell parcels of land to pay inheritance tax, as they did before 1984 without the world falling in, rather than be enabled to own it in perpetuity. Young farmers, now increasingly crowded out of the market, will get a chance to buy land: there is the prospect of a levelling off, even a fall, in farm rents. New life and ideas will be brought to the rural economy as innovative, energetic farmers enter the market – and production even increases.

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A convoy of tractors in Llandudno, where the Welsh Labour party conference was being held, are used to protest the inheritance tax changes for farms. Photograph: Oli Scarff/AFP/Getty Images

As importantly, a key principle that has underpinned all human societies – that we have a right to share in the bounty of inherited assets – will be reaffirmed. Whether ancient Rome or feudal Europe, societies have taken the view that just because an individual got lucky and came out of the right womb, they are not entitled to inherit everything without paying some levy or tribute on their inherited wealth. After all, wealth is enjoyed in a societal context and society made a contribution to the existence of the wealth. Of course society should share in the transfer, if only in a minor way, and the principle should extend to everyone, with as few exceptions as possible. Far from a death tax, it is a life tax on undeserved good luck.

Part of the problem is that rural Britain has never escaped the cultural trappings of feudalism

Why so much fuss? Part of the problem is that rural Britain has never escaped the cultural trappings of feudalism. It is now largely forgotten, but in 1883 the Conservative party, to fight the rise of progressive liberalism and its emergent outrider socialism, set up the mass membership Primrose League, whose adherents formally accepted the vital role that the “landed estates of the realm” played in an idea of imperial, free-enterprise Britain. It was a direct response to William Gladstone’s creation of “succession duty” in 1881 codifying the longstanding practice of levying a duty on the transfer of landed assets – and the principle had to be fought to the last. Within a decade its members, incredibly, outnumbered trade unionists.

The Earl of Derby speaks to that Primrose League tradition, arguing that his family is less a 650-year beneficiary of the baronial carve-up of England after the Norman conquest and more an employment-generating small business. Selling a little of the estate to pay inheritance tax is off limits; instead, the assumption is that the tax will have to be paid from the business’s cashflow, to preserve the estate in perpetuity – hence the over-egged predictions of devastation. In the wider economy, the creation of perpetual monopolies would be widely criticised as not only unfairly entrenching wealth and power but stifling the process of creative churn that is at the heart of economic vitality. Britain’s landed estates are excused from the same criticism.

It is a political and cultural achievement that must be challenged today with the same energy it was challenged by Liberal leaders in the run-up to the First World War. The Lib Dem leader, Ed Davey, calling for the government to suspend the measure, forgets Gladstone’s succession duty, William Harcourt’s introduction of estates duty in 1894 and David Lloyd George’s imaginative plans to break up the monopoly of land ownership. Yet, while the non-royal dukes might no longer have automatic membership of the House of Lords, they still own as much of Britain as they did then. Davey should not cosy up to Musk and co, inflaming the hysteria, but rather back Keir Starmer and Rachel Reeves who, to their credit, are holding the line.

But Labour needs to win the argument, and to be convincing that argument must be made from first principles. Inheritance tax springs from the universally held belief that society has the right to share when wealth is transferred on death as a matter of justice. This is not confiscation, especially if the lion’s share of the bequest is left intact. It is asking for a share. The principle should apply to all estates and to everyone. It is fair. It limits the entrenchment of wealth and privilege. It breaks up monopoly, especially of land. It enlarges the tax base. It gives the next generation a chance. Any other argument is the special pleading of plutocrats – and should be seen as such.

Source (Archive)
 
Inheritance tax springs from the universally held belief that society has the right to share when wealth is transferred on death as a matter of justice. This is not confiscation, especially if the lion’s share of the bequest is left intact. It is asking for a share.
'Those who had once simpered: “I don’t want to destroy the rich, I only want to seize a little of their surplus to help the poor, just a little, they’ll never miss it!”—then, later, had snapped: “The tycoons can stand being squeezed, they’ve amassed enough to last them for three generations”—then, later, had yelled: “Why should the people suffer while businessmen have reserves to last a year?”—now were screaming: “Why should we starve while some people have reserves to last a week?”'
-Ayn Rand Some Dumb White Bint
 
This policy is literally leftists screeching that the countryside is racist, Reeves needing someone to bankroll her poor life choices and envy of people who have generational landholding.

Also a nice big slice of freeing up land at bargain basement prices for WEO types.

Isn't it funny that Valencia's farmland also gets trashed at literally the same time and is also being forcibly sold off?
 
There are no young farmers waiting to buy a cheap farm parcel, you tit. There’s just the ones farming now and their kids. Who will not be able to farm if their parents have to sell the fucking farm.
They want the land, this is a land grab. It’s to break rural communities, to punish the few remaining white self sufficient bits of the country. It’s to enrich land developers. The people hoarding land are the developers not the bloody farmers. Farmers USE land for the good of us all. They want the farming community broken and then the land given to vast corporations who don’t take care of it, and to housing a development because there is SO much fucking money in it.
And dont make laugh about the earl of whatever. All THAT land is in trusts, and they never pay a single penny in taxes.
By the spirit of Arthur pendragon, my fellow bongs, we sorely need a revolution.
 
I don't know about using Mongols as a positive example when their entire historical significance is being a pain on everyone around them and creating an amazingly short lived empire notable for the obscene amount of rape in it.
The empire itself may have fallen apart once Genghis himself died but it centuries for its successors to quit owning everything between the Dnieper in the West and the Pacific coastline in the East, including what is now the modern-day Iraq and Iran.

Hell, the Mongol Khan who ruled Bagdad even sent one of his wives to Europe to inquire about a potential alliance regarding the mutually troublesome Muslims sandwiched between their two realms, but alas, he converted to Islam while she was gone and nothing came of it.
 
Ok interesting idea.

How about you start then, Mr. Author. How much did you get from inheritance? Do you have kids? Will you be giving away your assets once you die and leave your kids with only a fraction of what you owned? What about corporate assets, do those need to be taxed upon the death of shareholders and CEOs?
 
The last tasty morsel on Albion's corpse - the land - will be broken up and swallowed, in chunks or piecemeal, by overseas investors and with it will go any chance that corporations won't own everything in the country.
And Guardian readers will clap and cheer and weep tears of joy that, finally, everybody else is as poor, miserable, and bereft of hope as they are.

Sic transit Britannia.

The only good thing that may come out of this is that other countries may notice and not be so utterly retarded, but I'm not sure I've got much faith in that.

Maybe Vlad will nuke London before this passes? I need a drink.
 
Do you know who else went after farmers? Stalin and Mao.

Labour has already complained about the White British "colonizing" the countryside, despite being the native population who have always resided in the countryside, and their desire to "diversify" rural Britain. This is just Labour's way of seizing the land so they can concrete it over with council houses intended for more fucking Muslims.

I cannot even begin to describe the hatred I feel for Labour and the collective bunch of treacherous cunts belonging to that insidious party.
 
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