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Thousands of farmers are protesting about inheritance tax – here’s why

Farmers protested outside a Welsh Labour conference venue on Saturday (Picture: Getty)

Parts of central London will be brought to a standstill tomorrow by the biggest protest the Labour government has faced so far.

Between 10,000 and 40,000 farmers are expected to turn up to the demonstration in Westminster including Jeremy Clarkson.

The procession from Whitehall to Parliament Square will be spearheaded by children riding toy tractors, with participants told not to bring real machinery.

The farmers’ anger traces back to the Autumn Budget announcements three weeks ago, which include changes to inheritance tax.

The government also said it will speed up the phasing out of farming subsidies introduced under the EU, with taxpaer funding instead used to support ‘nature-friendly’ farming projects.

Farming assets are currently exempt from inheritance tax, but from 2026, those over a threshold of £1 million will be levied at 20%.

The new system is still considerably more generous than for other types of property, where the threshold is £325,000 and the rate is 40%.

Farmers gather on the Promenade, outside the venue of the Welsh Labour Party conference in Llandudno, north-west Wales on November 16, 2024, as Britain's Prime Minister Keir Starmer speaks to delegates inside. Farmers are staging a protest outside the conference in opposition to the changes in inheritance tax announced in the recent budget. (Photo by Oli SCARFF / AFP) (Photo by OLI SCARFF/AFP via Getty Images)
London’s protest is expected to draw crowds several times bigger than the desmontration in Llandudno on the weekend (Picture: AFP)

The government says the changes ‘are expected to affect the wealthiest 500 estates each year with smaller farms not affected’.

But farmers have pointed to data from the Environment Department suggesting some 66% of of farm businesses are worth more than £1 million.

Rally organiser Olly Harrison said: ‘[The government] don’t know their own figures, they have not done any homework whatsoever.

‘It’s embarrassing for them, how little research they’ve done on this before they brought it in.’

LLANDUDNO, WALES - NOVEMBER 16: UK Prime Minister Keir Starmer addresses the Welsh Labour Conference 2024 at Venue Cymru on November 16, 2024 in Llandudno, Wales. Welsh Labour are holding their first conference since Eluned Morgan became the leader of Welsh Labour and the First Minister of Wales. (Photo by Matthew Horwood/Getty Images)
Keir Starmer’s government has announced £40 billion of tax increases (Picture: Getty)

He argued the move could harm UK food production by weakening family businesses, adding: ‘this is what we do, this is what we produce, this is whose future is being taken away’.

National Farmers’ Union president Tom Bradshaw said: ‘There’s a complete disillusionment and distrust, and feeling of betrayal, that (the Government) doesn’t understand food production or even want to understand food production.

‘Farmers are cross, they’re worried, they feel they’ve nothing to lose, I don’t know where this ends,” he said, adding it was within the power of the Government to take the next step.

‘I don’t believe the Government have any choice but to rethink this policy,” he said.’

Jeremy Clarkson at the opening of his new pub, The Farmer's Dog, in Asthall, near Burford in Oxfordshire. Picture date: Friday August 23, 2024. PA Photo. The former Top Gear presenter is opening amid fears the venture may bring more traffic problems following the success of his Diddly Squat farm shop, with residents expressing concerns about traffic problems because the pub is located next to the busy A40 road. See PA story SHOWBIZ Clarkson. Photo credit should read: Ben Birchall/PA Wire
Jeremy Clarkson, who owns Diddly Squat farm, is expected to attend the protest (Picture: PA)

Supporting the tax changes, campaigner Guy Shrubshole said 35% of land in the UK is owned by corporations or wealthy investors.

Other Defra data suggests a quarter of England’s land is owned by just 2,500 of the largest farms, he added.

He continued: ‘Small farmers deserve all of our support – and they’re not helped by giving tax breaks to wealthy investors who’ve been snapping up farmland as a handy tax shelter, inflating the price of land and starving public services of cash.’

These changes are also smaller in comparison to other reforms to inheritance tax, which include the end of exemptions for inherited pensions and shares on the AIM stock exchange.

Overall, these changes to inheritance tax make up for just 6% of the overall £40 billion in tax increases announced by the government, according to the Institute for Fiscal Studies think tank.

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