The hypothesis is offered that all "outputs" produced by an investment in a cattle ranch have not been included in previous conventional analyses. These other "outputs" include tax shelters, land (and lease) appreciation, farm fundamentalism, and conspicuous consumption. Since these additional outputs are as much a part of the return on investment as is the output beef, they might well be consedered in evaluating use fees on public lands.This material was digitized as part of a cooperative project between the Society for Range Management and the University of Arizona Libraries.The Journal of Range Management archives are made available by the Society for Range Management and the University of Arizona Libraries. Contact lbry-journals@email.a...
The fundamental management problem of northern plains ranchers is to increase ranch income while mai...
Grazing permit value supposedly arises as a cost advantage for permit holders. Yet, ranches are over...
Evidence suggests that the range livestock industry in the Northern Great Plains is not as productiv...
Past analysis of the impacts of higher federal grazing fees on ranch values have been purely specula...
We build our economic models and estimate grazing policy impacts based on the standard economic mode...
The value of public land forage has been of key interest since grazing fees were first established o...
Livestock producers are in serious economic difficulty because forage and livestock management have ...
The economic impact of changing land-use policies has traditionally been estimated using the standar...
Are market forces at work in determining range forage values? This study tests the hypothesis that m...
Federal land grazing fees have been set by a formula that uses a base rate developed from a 1966 stu...
Conventional wisdom among rangeland professionals has been that for long-term sustainability of graz...
Experience has proven that an effective grazing system is both practical and scientifically sound. A...
The grazing capacity of mountain rangelands can be increased by management practices which improve c...
The total cost (fee and non-fee) of grazing BLM, FS, and private deeded rangeland was estimated by p...
The relative importance of income earning potential versus consumptive values in setting ranchland p...
The fundamental management problem of northern plains ranchers is to increase ranch income while mai...
Grazing permit value supposedly arises as a cost advantage for permit holders. Yet, ranches are over...
Evidence suggests that the range livestock industry in the Northern Great Plains is not as productiv...
Past analysis of the impacts of higher federal grazing fees on ranch values have been purely specula...
We build our economic models and estimate grazing policy impacts based on the standard economic mode...
The value of public land forage has been of key interest since grazing fees were first established o...
Livestock producers are in serious economic difficulty because forage and livestock management have ...
The economic impact of changing land-use policies has traditionally been estimated using the standar...
Are market forces at work in determining range forage values? This study tests the hypothesis that m...
Federal land grazing fees have been set by a formula that uses a base rate developed from a 1966 stu...
Conventional wisdom among rangeland professionals has been that for long-term sustainability of graz...
Experience has proven that an effective grazing system is both practical and scientifically sound. A...
The grazing capacity of mountain rangelands can be increased by management practices which improve c...
The total cost (fee and non-fee) of grazing BLM, FS, and private deeded rangeland was estimated by p...
The relative importance of income earning potential versus consumptive values in setting ranchland p...
The fundamental management problem of northern plains ranchers is to increase ranch income while mai...
Grazing permit value supposedly arises as a cost advantage for permit holders. Yet, ranches are over...
Evidence suggests that the range livestock industry in the Northern Great Plains is not as productiv...