Sir James Dyson slams Rachel Reeves โ€“ โ€˜my business is at risk!โ€™ | Politics | News


Billionaire businessman Sir James Dyson has slammed Rachel Reeves, suggesting that his business is at risk. The tycoon says he may not be able to pass his company down to his children because of the Chancellor’s tax raid on family firms. On Tuesday, the Government said it would water down its policy, raising the inheritanceย tax relief threshold from ยฃ1million to ยฃ2.5million after months of protest.

But business assets above that new threshold will still be subject to a 20% levy when a business owner dies. Ms Reeves’s changes to Business Property Relief (BPR) are โ€œreally, really damagingโ€ to private family-owned operations, Mr Dyson said.

The entrepreneur added that his company would have to find โ€œbillionsโ€, which he says would be impossible.

Sir James told BBC Radio 4’s Today programme this morning: โ€œYou have to pay a 20% inheritance tax. Actually itโ€™s 40% because you have to take a dividend, if you could, to pay the 20%.

He added: “What it means is youโ€™d have to sell the business.

“And who wants to start a family business if you canโ€™t leave it to your children, if it canโ€™t carry on in the same ethos to which it started.โ€

The Dyson founder also said: โ€œCompanies are valued on a multiple of their earnings. So if youโ€™re paying 40 per cent of a multiple of your earnings, thatโ€™s billions in my case.

โ€œWe havenโ€™t got billions of cash. You know, we donโ€™t have it โ€“ so you have to sell the business to pay it.

“But a company has no value. Thereโ€™s no assets that you can sell. Its value is a multiple of its profits, so itโ€™s paper money. You simply donโ€™t have that money.โ€

The Government focused the announcement of its change in tack on farmers.

Environment Secretary Emma Reynolds said: โ€Farmers are at the heart of our food security and environmental stewardship, and I am determined to work with them to secure a profitable future for British farming.

โ€œWe have listened closely to farmers across the country and we are making changes today to protect more ordinary family farms.

โ€œWe are increasing the individual threshold from ยฃ1million to ยฃ2.5million which means couples with estates of up to ยฃ5million will now pay no inheritance tax on their estates.

โ€œItโ€™s only right that larger estates contribute more, while we back the farms and trading businesses that are the backbone of Britainโ€™s rural communities.โ€

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