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MEASURES ANNOUNCED IN today’s Budget are set to benefit the farming industry by freeing up more land.
They have been welcomed by Macra and the Irish Cattle and Sheep Association.
The changes announced by Michael Noonan today include assistance for farmers who receive income from another job to supplement their income from agriculture, due to the “volatile” nature of agricultural prices, as long as this is the result of on-farm activities.
Income averaging will apply to this. All income averaging will also be extended from 3 to 5 years, but will be reviewed after three years.
The Minister for Finance highlighted the enormous contribution farming makes to the Irish economy. The sector employs as many as 170,000 people, and with an annual turnover of €26 billion.
The moves made today mainly centred on the Agri-Taxation Review, which was announced in last year’s Budget.
This process analysed a number of potential tax measures for the sector, with the view of ensuring ‘value for money for the economy’, and looked to strengthen existing supports available.
Minister for Finance Michael Noonan noted this afternoon that although there will be no milk quotas from 2015, there will need to more land available. Measures announced today target the long-term leasing of land.
Noonan said:
We need to make additional land available to young and active farmers.
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The tax changes are aimed at incentivising long-term leasing arrangements. This includes an expansion of Capital Gains Tax retirement relief to land which is currently let under conacre and is either sold or placed on a long-term lease by the start of 2016.
The amount of income exempted from long-term leasing will be increased by 50% and a fourth threshold for lease periods of 15 or more years will be introduced, with income of up to €40,000 being exempted.
Stamp duty relief for non-residential land transfers between certain close relatives to be extended #Budget15
The current age limit of 40 for leasing relief will be removed.
There will also be an increase in the current farmer’s flat-rate VAT addition from 5% to 5.2%. Relief for farm restructuring is being expanded to include whole farm replacements.
Other measures include:
Capital Gains Tax (CGT) retirement relief is being amended so land that has been leased for up to 25 years in total (increased from 15) ending with disposal will qualify for the relief.
From January, Capital Acquisitions Tax (CAT) relief will be available only for agricultural property gifted to or inherited by active farmers and to individuals who are not active farmers but who lease out the property on a long-term basis for agricultural use to such farmers.
Agricultural leases between 5 and 35 years in duration to active farmers will be exempt from Stamp Duty.
Consanguinity relief, which applies to the transfers of non-residential property to certain relatives, is to be expanded for another three years.
The measures have been welcomed by rural youth organisation Macra na Feirme.
“Access to land and the use of land are structural issues that prove a constraint on increasing output,” President Kieran O’Dowd said.
Short term land rental (conacre) is causing a major barrier for the progression of Irish farming, therefore incentives that encourage long term leases will favour the active use of the land and support active young farmers to grow their farm business.
The Irish Cattle and Sheep Farmers’ Association has said today’s Budget will encourage long-term leasing and support land mobility.
“The 50% increase in income tax exemption for long-term leases and greater flexibility is a positive move, as is extending the relief to farmers under 40 years old,” said Patrick Kent, ICSA President, “However more needs to be done to incentivise farm partnerships. The taxation incentives outlined here are geared towards leaving farming and leasing out to unconnected third parties.”
“The extension of farm restructuring relief to cover whole farm disposals is also a positive move for those cases where there is an opportunity to buy a less fragmented holding, and this is something ICSA lobbied for in its agri-taxation submission.”
However, we are disappointed that there is no specific move to introduce a more explicit means of saving profits in a good year to make provision for a bad year.
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People just get angry and offended by everything now ffs. I am so happy to have grown up in the generation I did. Giving the whole world a platform has just made things too sensitive.
@Nollaig Elliot: You are 100% correct.Everyone is SOOO fu@king sensitive now.These snowflakes wouldn’t have been much good between 1939-1945.The ‘always offended” pussy generation.
You must have enjoyed letting the Catholic Church do all your thinking for you, while at the same time meekly turning a blind eye to child abuse, institutionalization of single mothers, overt racism and the criminalization of homosexuals.
I really doubt people are offended any more than they ever were. It has just become acceptable to say so now. When I was a child in the ’80s, there was always a sense that if you were bullied, you must be weak or “too quiet” or in some way have brought it on yourself, so for that reason, most people who were being bullied, denied it vigorously if anybody asked them about it. To admit somebody was treating you badly was seen as an indictment of you, as if you were somehow responsible for somebody else’s behaviour. And so, people suffered in silence.
Now we have realised for the most part, that this is ridiculous and extremely harmful. We have seen how abusers and bullies continued to abuse and bully others because nobody ever reported them. So it has become more acceptable to say “no, it not OK to bully/abuse/make racist comments to me.”
So it looks as if more people are hurt by being abused or bullied but I don’t think people in the past were any less upset. They were just told to shut up and put up with it.
@Margaret Lane: the same situation pertains now. People in a stronger position bully, use and manipulate weaker people. Just an unpleasant fact of life. Men are no more likely to look for help today as they were yesterday. May be different for women I don’t know.
@Nollaig Elliot: Peoples egos are to blame, their arrogance has made them think they are right especially if others agree with them. This has killed off free speech with free ideas as well as free will, people have lost their individualism for the sake of fitting in and being noticed, they want to be accepted now and belong, they don’t care what is right or wrong as long as they can fit in and get noticed.
Anger is a form of being spoilt, always getting their way from bad parenting as anger comes from a lack of control and at its heart is being spoilt. Always getting your way as a child never prepares anyone to deal with setbacks or hardships, so when it happens they are never mature enough to handle it. So I think they turn this rejection onto themselves or onto others them as in bullying. The mass media has replaced parents and parenting now and the things it teaches should be the domain of parents but parents now expect teachers to parent instead of them. People are losing how and what to do because they spent too much time listening to others telling them what to believe, feel and think. Mainly due to the culture from the U.S. of consumerism with their morals broadcasted into their homes from the media made by people who are like Harvey Weinstein and his like. No one thinks for themselves and that is why they’re so angry because they don’t know what they really want, how to get what they want and how to be happy with what they have?
@Adrian: We live in the age of fakeness, mass consumerism, Trumps twitter rants, May’s brainless decisions, EU corruption and Bankers greed as well as thick snowflakes. Society dictates what it becomes from behaving as it does, it feeds itself because society is breaking down, the end of empires has begun because everything is so corrupt now that it has lost its backbone which is needed for to survive? http://flhef.org/pdf/The%20Cycle%20of%20Nations.pdf
You forgot election of Macron in France both major parties lost the election….Anger of electroate…Is making thousands of public servants redundant and promises to cut public spending in France by €60 billion over 5 years…Still seen by mainstream media as a great socialist leader…Merkel in Germany also electroate angry at her immigration policy….No anger in Ireland however….
@John003: you seem to be speaking for electorates of other populations which both rejected the reactionary right wing politics that personifies the kind of undirected anger being talked about. And Macron is not seen as a socialist, no one talks about him as a socialist. You might be confusing economic policy (he’s right of center, especially for France) with social policies (he’s a moderate, not all that liberal really).
Yeah not sure what you’re on about really.
@John003: Macron was nominally a member of the Socialist Party in France from 2006 to 2009 so as to hold unsecured positions but he was never an actual socialist. His background is that of senior civil servant in economics and finance as well as previously an Investment Banker. The mainstream media has never depicted Macron as socialist and therefore your comment is uninformed as well as inaccurate.
Read “Age of Anger” by Pankaj Mishra. There is a trend to rise in anger and rage but it strarted before 2017 although it was more emphasised in degree in 2017 than before.
Social media has set a trend for dissemination of feelomgs of anger and conventional media is responding to the public attitude of looking for more and more angry content.
Trump acquired the US Presidency on the back of anger. Anger is produced by fear and hate. People can be more easily manipulated by negative emotions than positive emotions, responding uncritically when the more primitive parts of the brain are excited.
The hard right and the ultra right, authoritarianism and fascism thrive in a climate of anger generated by fear and hate. A manipulated politician sees sources of fear where there are nine and becomes blind to what should sources of fear.
@Fiona deFreyne: I couldn’t have described the whole feminist movement better myself. Great comment Fiona. Feminism and its authoritarian nature is a result of this ‘anger’ you talk of.
Great to know, as I can now get back to ignoring them.
@Fiona deFreyne: That’s all very Yoda but the labels you use are somewhere confusing. Hard right, ultra right etc etc are actually given by people like you to those who are angry because governments and institutions make decisions and cannot be challenged or changed. As we know if you have been negatively affected by the EU stance of migration and you dare say anything you are labelled and silenced. Today in Germany a law comes into use that enables them silence all opposition to the government’s policies on social media as it will be branded as hare speech. We’ve been seeing it already on facebook where they are using a sledgehammer to crack a walnut. Its that totalitarian approach to silence unlicensed opinion that causes anger. I have to say I’ve been shocked at what FB have been doing.
@Fiona deFreyne: I think the right and left now are different sides of the same coin especially when the left in the U.S. can burn peoples property on them, injure and threaten others with murder. All violence is the same on both sides, as Dr. No said East and West are just points on a compass, the same now can be said about the left and right in politics and in society.
Balance is about treating others as you would like them to treat you and that is the key of society but society is changing due to politics and due to social media especially when ones can hide under handles that allows them to be as negative as they like because the feel they don’t have control. Racism, sectarianism, poverty and class all create a feeling of not being in control and this lack of control can create racism, sectarianism, classism and hatred, it creates and feeds itself and draws itself to itself especially when like can attract like on the world wide web, the more people find others who believe, feel and act as they do then the more they think that they are right and then the more extreme things become and all because people are sheep-like in their nature?
Yeah, the Left sure like to whinge! Everyone else just gets on with it. In the US the stock market is flourishing, unemployment is down, the POTUS is getting through his pre-election promises at a fair rate.
Here, the stability brought about by the minority government and its “confidence & supply” arrangement with Fianna Fáil has brought about significant successes such as reduced unemployment rate, early repayment of debts, etc. Sure, homelessness and the cost of housing continues to be a bi
@Brian Lenehan: … big issue, and I’m not sure that any government would be able to resolve it without a referendum to remove or amend the right to property, but in the whole there’s a lot to be happy about.
Though of course Trump has had no time to have any impact on the economy yet, so if the economy of the U.S. is doing well, it is all to the credit of Obama and possibly Bush.
We won’t know what impact Trump has on the economy for a good few years yet.
If we could be angry in a more positive way…All the petty acts of terrorism but not one really good revolution. Only so much marching and pillow punching you can do. If anything, 2017 was “the year of fear” – anxiously looking over your shoulder. And yet another year in the sorry saga of “talking about but doing nothing about” the big three: loneliness, homelessness and mental illness. 2017 was a wasted year.
@Paul Jennings: Anger can never be used in a positive way, it is always destructive, anger never accepts, motivates or handles anything in a positive way. It just adds to more negativity.
What people need is motivation, love, acceptance, growth and a reality check. Nothing ever gets changed because people never own anything, they pass the buck and kick the can down the road and so things keep getting worse as a result. It never helps because people have their own priorities and these are always selfish and self absorbed?
So when is the Journal going to cover the fact that the founder of Esprit and a political backer of Clinton was found out to be paying $500,000 dollars to back women accusing Trump of sexual assault during the election campaign?
Corruption and unethical politics by the Democrats and their supporters seems like a pretty important topic.
The only angry fools in 2017 were the un-democratic far left.Can’t accept President Trump.Can’t accept Brexit.A bunch of small minded village idiots.Toys out of the pram.Assh@les.
@Ted Murray: I’m actually left wing when it comes to things like workers rights etc.I’m leaning very much right when dealing with crime & punishment & Islamic terrorism.You see, people don’t have to be far left or far right.Some people find this concept difficult to understand.
@Kieran Conroy: i can see why trump and brexit happened. Wishful thinking on the good old days BS. Where men were men and uppity people knew there place. Trump is in power to make himself and him mates Koch brothers and co etc rich end of and brexit was the idea that little Britain wants their empire back. Take their country back from the EU and then sell off the health service/ transportation bit by bit. Duh!
@Fiona Fitzgerald:
So next time I get angry because it’s raining on my day off I’ll remind myself that it’s only an overreaction to an artificially induced state of fear…. Thanks for the tip.
Anger seems to be caused by a lack of control, desperation or from stupidity, those 3 seemed to sum up 2016 and 2017 as well. Why would 2018 be any different?
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