Both Wates Group chairman Sir James Wates and Hill Group founder/chief executive Andy Hill have spoken out about the impact that inheritance tax reforms announced in last week鈥檚 budget will have on their family firms.
In the budget chancellor Rachel Reeves announced that inheritance tax relief on private assets and businesses will be capped鈥坅t 拢1m from April 2026. While 拢1m sounds like a lot of money, in the context of businesses like farms or property & construction, it doesn鈥檛 cover much of the asset value.
Quoted by The Times newspaper, Sir James Wates said: 鈥淧eople will say what is the point of carrying on. Do I want to hand on this poisoned legacy to future generations? It makes it ripe and fair game for overseas investors to come in and pick up very good businesses on the cheap because the aspiration goes. I think that is awful.鈥
James Wates is part of the fourth generation of his family to run the company; the fifth is already coming through.
Andy聽 Hill, 66, has no intention of giving up yet but has two sons, Greg and Tom, in their mid-late thirties alongside him in the business.
Hill told The Times that they would 鈥渉ave to find the best part of 拢100m鈥 to take on the family business, adding: 鈥淭hey鈥檝e got no chance.鈥
Hill said: 鈥淚t鈥檚 a family business and the plan was never to sell. I voted Labour mainly because the housing system was broken and I thought we needed a change.鈥
However, he said that he was not going to suddenly sell his business because of the inheritance tax changes. He thinks that the government will be forced into a U-turn when it realises the scale of the mistake that Reeves has made.
鈥淚 think at some point they will change it back,鈥 Hill said. 鈥淚 don鈥檛 think it鈥檚 been thought through.鈥
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