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Tax breaks for farmers causing ‘subsidy addiction’ warns government adviser

An adviser to Michael Gove said farmers got a range of benefits that no other group in the economy received.

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Dairy cows

A senior adviser to Environment Secretary Michael Gove has called for a review of tax breaks for farmers.

Economist Dieter Helm said the current system led to “subsidy addiction”.

Professor Helm, who said he was speaking in a personal capacity, told BBC Radio 4’s Today programme: “If you’re producing 0.7% of output, receiving £3 billion of subsidies for that output of about £9 billion and being exempted on rates, and being exempted on diesel and being exempted on inheritance tax, this is quite a list and we’ve got there by accident almost, one after another of these concessions has been made, it’s kind of a subsidy addiction in the end.

A harvester at work
The NFU defended the help given (PA)

“Farmers receive not just the £3 billion of subsidy, they receive a whole range of other benefits that nobody else in the economy gets.”

A spokeswoman for the Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs (Defra) distanced Mr Gove from the remarks.

“These ideas are not under consideration. The Secretary of State has been clear that he wants to go on generously supporting farmers for many more years to come.”

National Farmers Union vice president Guy Smith told the BBC that government assistance helped British agriculture stay competitive.

“What we are rightly weary of is having to compete against farmers in other parts of the world who get greater levels of support, or who have different costs of production because of different policy.”

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