More families are creating trust investments to make sure farm land
remains in the family, leaving less land for beginning farmers, Daniel
Enoch reports for Agri-Pulse. A U.S. Department of Agriculture survey
shows that about a 10 percent "of the 911 million farmland acres
outside of Alaska and Hawaii—about 91.5 million acres—is slated for
ownership transfer in the next five years, not including farmland that
is in or expected to be put into wills."
Landlords are
expect to keep or put nearly 48 percent of these acres in trusts, Enoch
writes. "Some 26 million acres are expected to be sold to a relative or
given as a gift, and only 21 million acres are expected to be sold to a
non-relative. This means that only a small percentage of farmland—just
over 2 percent—will be available for new entrants into the farming
sector."
"The survey showed that 353.8 million acres of
land were rented out for agricultural purposes by more than 2 million
landowners last year," for about 39 percent of total farmland, Enoch
writes. "Of the 2 million or so landowners, 13 percent were farmers and
ranchers, and 87 percent were landlords who do not operate a farm."
Joseph
T. Reilly, administrator for USDA's National Agricultural Statistics
Service, said "the total value of the land and buildings on the rented
acres was $1.1 trillion," Enoch writes. "About 63 percent of the total
land rented was for cropland, and 34 percent was for pasture.
Non-operator landlords leased oil and gas rights on 31.9 million acres
and sold those rights on 4.1 million acres. Out of total farmland, oil
and gas rights were leased on 61 million acres and sold on 11.3
million." (Read more)
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