Worth more than gold |
“Agricultural land tends to be counter-cyclical to the rest
of economy, so there was a rush to land, which was seen as a haven, in much the
same way as gold,” he says.
Farmland also offers generous tax breaks on inheritance and
capital gains tax. It qualifies for agricultural property and business property
relief, which means land is exempt from inheritance tax after two years, as
long as it is actively farmed. Rollover relief allows the sale of a farming
asset to be rolled into a new farming business and capital gains tax is
deferred until the sale of the new asset.
The price of prime arable land, concentrated mainly in
eastern England, especially East Anglia, rose almost fourfold, by 277 per cent,
in the decade to 2014, according to figures from Savills, the estate agency, on
Wednesday. In the decade from 1994-2004, prices grew just 41 per cent. The
price of bare land — without a big house on it — increased last year by 15 per
cent to an average of £8,000 an acre, according to the 2014 farmland index
published by Knight Frank.
These price rises beat other assets, including prime London
property, up 127 per cent during the past decade, the FTSE All-Share index and
even gold, says Savills.
Hampshire, Berkshire and Oxfordshire, appeal particularly to
“lifestyle buyers” — those attracted more by the prospect of breeding horses,
hunting or a large house than by farming.
The scarcity of supply is part of a trend. As Peter Pereira
Gray, the Wellcome Trust’s managing director of investments, said at the time
of the Co-Op land acquisition: “Mark Twain’s remark that ‘they are not making
any more land’ is a good underpinning reason why farmland is attractive.”
“A lot less than 1 per cent of farmland is sold each year —
in the 1970s, it was 3-4 per cent,” says Jason Beedell, head of research at
Smiths Gore, a rural estate and management agency. “There are few forced sales
and since the tax treatment is benign, people hold on as long as they can.” However,
the main driver of higher prices has been demand. Farmers account for the
majority of buyers, but they are competing against growing numbers of private
investors and institutional buyers. Mr Beedell says: “Although wealthy
individuals only make up 25 per cent of farmland buyers, the prices they pay
affect the whole market.” Investors
include Sir James Dyson, the billionaire inventor of the bagless vacuum
cleaner, who bought swaths of land in Lincolnshire, in 2012. Wellcome Trust,
the charitable foundation, paid £249m last year to acquire the 40,000-acre
farms business of the Co-Operative Group.
Andrew Shirley, head of rural research at Knight Frank, says
strong commodity prices and a desire to take advantage of long-term population
trends have encouraged investment. The world’s population is expected to peak
at 10bn mid-century, so food production will have to increase to feed an extra
3bn mouths.
We have a landed class in the UK that do nothing and get
plenty. They receive tax breaks and are free of inheritance tax. Only the most elite are prospering and making hay while the sun shines.
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