I quite agree, farms should be run like any other business. Also, farmers, in my view, have a moral duty to preserve the countryside and comply with good husbandry. But what other business works like farming? The Agricultural Holdings Act 1986 was implemented because of the uniqueness of the farming business. A farm cannot just spring up overnight and depends on the nurturing and care of the land over a 12 month season. A bad season means no income - not a thing you can do about the weather. If it rains all summer, well, no, you can't get your grain in and when you do (if you do), it costs you a fortune to dry it. And let's assume you have a good year. Chances are, you are selling to a supermarket who insists on paying ridiculously low prices so that they can pass on the savings to the consumer (not). And yes, when it comes to making ends meet, the only thing most farmers can do in the long run is sell their land (to a prairie farmer who rips up the hedges and changes our landscape irreparably for the worse or to a developer). Which with agricultural land making didly squat, by the time the bank and the taxman (CGT payable at 40%) have had their cut, what is there left?