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Economic Development

Somerset cheese boss warns Rachel Reeves' Budget will cost farm £500k a year

Richard Clothier, managing director of family-run Wyke Farms, has expressed deep concern over the financial impact to his dairy farm

Wyke Farms managing director, Richard Clothier(Image: Adam Gerrard / Daily Express)

The boss of Somerset cheesemaker Wyke Farms has voiced concern over the financial impact of Rachel Reeves' Budget on his 164-year-old dairy farm.

Following the Chancellor's October statement which included a £25bn National Insurance hike, Richard Clothier anticipates at least a £500,000 annual increase in costs for his business, which he describes as "quite a shock" and a "difficult challenge".

The third-generation cheesemaker said the strain was being exacerbated by significant wage inflation and alterations to agricultural property relief and business property relief that were also announced in the Budget.

As the custodian of a cherished cheese recipe dating back to 1861, created by his grandmother Ivy's family, Mr Clothier told the Express: "It's probably going to cost in the region of about an extra £500,000 a year."

He also reflected on the wider implications for his supply chain, adding: "We've got about 150 farmers that supply us from the region. They've all been impacted by the national insurance for the wage increases but also the inheritance tax at a time when their confidence was quite low anyway.

"Like national insurance, it was the unpredictability. The fact that it was something the government said it wasn't probably going to happen and then it happened."

He also expressed concern over the swift implementation enforced by the government's decisions: "It wasn't as if people had any time to prepare for it. It's been a massive shock to the industry. It's undermined confidence for farmers at a time that we need to be prioritising food production."

From April 2026, assets in agriculture and business property up to £1m will be eligible for full relief, yet values exceeding this threshold are set to incur a tax rate of 20%, reports .