Litcius/Paper detail

The economics of land tenure and soil health

Andrew W. Stevens

2022Soil Security29 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Farmers who own their land face different incentives than those who rent. Economically rational owner-operators consider their soil's future productive capacity when making current-year management decisions. Year-to-year tenant farmers, however, are incentivized to prioritize current production at the expense of future production. This insight has implications for the development of soil health policy. In this article, I present a model of agricultural production that combines profit maximization, soil health dynamics, and three different forms of land tenure. I use the results of the model to inform a discussion of relevant academic research on soil health dynamics, land tenure, and the capitalization of soil characteristics into land prices. I argue policies that increase the share of owner operated acres or increase the prevalence of long-term formal lease agreements will have the additional benefit of improving soil health.

Topics & Concepts

Land tenureIncentiveCapitalizationLeaseBusinessLand managementAgricultureAgricultural productivityNatural resource economicsAgricultural economicsProduction (economics)EconomicsGeographyFinanceMicroeconomicsArchaeologyPhilosophyLinguisticsLand Rights and ReformsAgriculture, Land Use, Rural DevelopmentConservation, Biodiversity, and Resource Management