Minette Batters has completed her review of farm profitability which some see as the Government using the former NFU president as political cover.
Nevertheless, I agree with her that Defra has lacked good political direction, being treated as an up or out way station for ministers (my words, not hers). It pains me to say it but the only minister who showed any real leadership was Michael Gove, Certainly not Liz Truss with her selfies and disastrous trade deals.
Batters reckons that Brexit left a policy void created by exit from the CAP (in my view something better could have been put in its place but wasn't.)
For the average farm, food production itself is no longer profitable, the report found. In the 2023-24 financial year, the average English farm made a net loss on agricultural activities, with state funding and diversification out of farming “providing the bulk of an average farm’s income”.
Rising input costs such as fuel, fertiliser and animal feed following Russia’s invasion of Ukraine — as well as increasingly volatile weather — have battered confidence in the sector, the report found. But constant shifts in government policy, including the swift removal of agricultural support schemes, had weighed on real farm incomes.
In March the government suspended one of its post-Brexit support schemes, the sustainable farming incentive, because the budget had run out, leading to a sharp drop in income for many farms. The government has not confirmed when it will be restarted.
In 2023-24, the average income from farming in Great Britain was £41,500 per farm. A review by land agents Strutt & Parker found fewer than half of England’s farms made more than £34,500, the minimum income they define as economically sustainable.
In addition farmers are still smarting from the (partial) imposition of inheritance tax where a prolonged campaign has led to only minor government concessions.
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