Impacts of the Small-Tract Forestland Tax Program on Forestland Use in Oregon

Author:

Rossi David123,Rushakoff Ben24,Kuusela Olli-Pekka25

Affiliation:

1. Department of Applied Economics, Oregon State University , Corvallis, OR , USA

2. Department of Forest Engineering, Resources, and Management, Oregon State University . Corvallis, OR , USA

3. Department of Forestry and Environmental Resources, North Carolina State University , 840 Main Campus Drive, Raleigh, NC 27606 , USA

4. American Forests , Washington, D.C. , USA

5. Research Institute of the Finnish Economy (Etla) , Helsinki , Finland

Abstract

Abstract Preferential tax programs for forest landowners are used to achieve land use–related environmental and social objectives. Nonindustrial landowners are likely to own forests near development boundaries, which may lead to a higher likelihood of land conversion from forests to alternative uses. This article answers the question of how preferential tax programs for small-tract forestland (STF) owners have influenced the conversion of forested lands in Oregon since 2005. We find that a 10% increase in STF program participation within a county (as measured by acreage enrolled) can lead to a conversion of 127 ac from wildland forest to mixed forest/agriculture since the prior forest inventory period. Compared with the default “Forestland” tax program, participation in the alternative STF tax program has had a smaller and statistically weaker effect on the number of acres converted to low-density residential use. However, hypothetical elimination of the STF tax program would increase enrollment in the default Forestland tax program, which was measured to have a greater effect on the conversion of wildland forest to low-density residential land. Hence, the results overall provide evidence that the STF program has achieved its objective of mitigating development pressures and reducing conversion of forestland to nonforest uses.

Funder

Oregon Department of Forestry

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Ecological Modeling,Ecology,Forestry

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3. Generalized Variance Function Applications in Forestry

4. This Land is Their Land: The Potential and Diversity of Nonindustrial Private Forests;Argow;Journal of Forestry,1996

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