FARMING SECTOR READY TO HELP ECONOMIC RECOVERY - IFA
Friday, 26 November 2010 14:50

Speaking at today’s meeting of the IFA Executive Council in Dublin, IFA
President John Bryan said the farming sector will do all in its power to
drive export-led growth, which will be critical to creating employment and
our economic recovery.

He said, “the farm schemes and taxation measures provide an important
stimulus to the rural economy. Expenditure on farm schemes, including REPS,
the AEOS, Suckler Cow, Forestry and Disadvantaged Areas schemes, and
taxation reliefs that facilitate restructuring and expansion, play a
significant role in generating production. They must be maintained in next
month’s Budget.”

Mr Bryan said members of the Executive Council were extremely angry that a
failure of the regulatory, banking and political leadership threw caution to
the wind in the good times, which has brought the country to its current
position. We must now restructure and focus all our attention on recovery,
and agriculture has a major role to play.”
On the taxation adjustments that may be introduced in the Budget, Mr Bryan
said, “Taxation measures that facilitate farm restructuring and transfers
are fundamental to retaining our family farm model through the generations.
Stock and other reliefs are critical to increasing output to meet the Food
Harvest 2020 targets. Any changes to income tax must be equitable across all
sectors.”

He continued, “A number of key taxation reliefs are in place for farming to
encourage structural reform and competitiveness in agriculture. These
include long-term land-leasing, stamp duty relief, capital gains retirement
relief, stocking relief and agricultural relief for farm transfer.  It is
vital that these reliefs are retained in Budget 2011, as any reduction would
disincentivise farm transfer, investment and consolidation, and place an
unaffordable tax burden on farmers.”
Mr Bryan said, “In Budget 2011, it is vital that funding for farm schemes is
maintained. This funding is redistributed throughout the rural economy,
through expenditure by farmers on locally provided inputs, labour, goods and
services. As a priority, the AEOS scheme must be extended for all farmers
leaving REPS3, the Suckler Cow Welfare Scheme must be fully funded and
forestry and other payments must be fully maintained.”