Do you want to know the costliest mistake a farmer can make when it comes to safeguarding the future of their operation? It’s neglecting to plan or having an overly simple plan, says Jim Angell, an attorney with Kennedy Berkley.
There are all sorts of reasons farmers are lax about succession planning. Maybe the patriarch doesn’t want to give up control or face mortality. Maybe some of the kids don’t get along or the parents are stymied by the thought they need to treat all their kids equally.
“Farmers have spent 35 years in survival mode, and succession planning has barely registered,” he says. “The past five or six years they have gone from surviving to thriving, but it’s still hard for them to believe a sophisticated plan is necessary.”
That sophistication comes into play when deciding how to treat farm and non-farm siblings.
khumphreys
June 14, 2024 03:30 PM
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