The Department of the Interior Will Pay 1,900 Local Governments $553 Million in ‘Lost Tax Revenue’ in 2018

federal lands

by Daniel Di Martino

 

Over 1,900 local governments received $553 million from the Department of Interior this year to compensate them for lost tax revenue for federal lands that cannot be developed in their territory. These payments are the consequence of more than 640 million acres of land, which amounts to 28 percent of the U.S. territory owned by the federal government.

The Federal Government Is Hoarding Huge Potential Prosperity

The costs of federal ownership are not only payments to local governments but also environmental damage due to mismanagement and deferred maintenance, as well as the lost economic activity that cannot occur in 28 percent of the country.

U.S. Geological Survey National Map with all Federal and Indian lands

Of all federal land, 27.4 million acres are National Parks, while approximately 600 million acres are managed by the Bureau of Land Management, the National Forest Service, the Fish and Wildlife Service, and the National Park Service. These government agencies allow grazing and other economic activities on federal lands in exchange for fees. However, since fees are not enough for the expenses of these agencies, the federal government spends several billion dollars per year to cover the difference.

Additionally, the federal government owns more than three trillion barrels of oil and 450 trillion cubic meters of natural gas that are currently not available for leasing or development.

The Bureau of Economic Analysis concluded that the value of all federal lands was $1.8 trillion in 2009. However, this estimate is outdated and was calculated while property values were declining.

Even though there are no estimates of federal land value after 2009, the existence of extensive natural resources and the recovery of property values since then make it reasonable to assume that the value is several trillion dollars. If Congress allowed the sale of all federal lands, the revenues could fund a sizable portion of the national debt. Billions of dollars per year could be saved since land management agencies bureaucracy would be downsized. Additionally, privatization could create thousands of jobs in construction, energy, and tourism.

Privatization Can Protect the Environment While Empowering Local Communities

Many “environmentalist” groups argue that privatizing federal lands would destroy the environment. They assert that companies would buy land, deplete it from all its resources, and leave. But the reality is that despite global deforestation and increased domestic wood production, the forest cover of the United States has grown every year the last three decades, in part due to the private forestry industry. This is because ownership is the best incentive for preservation. Owners have an incentive to preserve the resources of their land just as homeowners have an incentive to preserve their homes.

For instance, farmers rotate their crops to keep the nitrogen levels of the soil and avoid desertification.

On the other hand, the federal government is not subject to the incentives of private landowners. If the land deteriorates, agencies do not bear the burden but taxpayers do, and costs are too small when dispersed among all citizens for any of them to give it importance. For example, the government has failed to control the wild horse population, leading to overgrazing, but most Americans are not aware of the problem.

Federal lands ownership gives the government a role of gatekeeper for the use of land, making agencies vulnerable to political pressure by environmental or industry lobby groups. The best example of this phenomenon is grazing in federal lands in the West, where government agencies are now charging much more than private grazing, unduly restricting the activity.

Opponents of privatization also cite the need to preserve the beauty of America when defending public ownership. However, there are many privately owned natural landmarks, such as parts of the Appalachian Trail, which preserve natural beauty because they want to attract visitors.

To ensure that privatizing national monuments and parks would preserve environmental standards, any new law could restrict certain types of activity while allowing for tourism and recreation to develop in the former monuments and parks. Moreover, when privatizing forests, non-profit environmental groups could also buy land to protect it just as they do now. Groups such as the Appalachian Trail ConservancyNature Conservancy, and the Minnesota Land Trust buy and administer large amounts of land across the country with the purpose of preserving it.

The Trump administration has taken steps to make more resources available for leasing, and Secretary of Interior Ryan Zinke should continue opening the federal lands to development, but congressional action is needed to unleash the full potential of federal lands.

Secretary Zinke should explore transferring federal lands to states since this is a solution with recent success and with more support in Congress. States could then transfer some or all of the land to private parties, giving more control to both individuals and local communities in the use of their land.

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Daniel Di Martino is a contributor to Economics 21. Follow him on Twitter @DanielDiMartino.

 

 

 

 

 

 

Appeared at Economics21 and reprinted from FEE.org.

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One Thought to “The Department of the Interior Will Pay 1,900 Local Governments $553 Million in ‘Lost Tax Revenue’ in 2018”

  1. Terry

    The amount of “federal” land owned is limited per the Constitution – instead, those are public lands that were to be held in trust until such time as the individual states were formed and able to assume that role. A more complete discussion can be found here: http://veritasresearchconsulting.com/

    The state of Utah passed HB148 that mandated the transfer to state control, effective December 31, 2014. So far, that legal mandate has been ignored. A copy of the legislation can be found here: https://le.utah.gov/~2012/bills/hbillint/hb0148.htm

    Federal “management” is not only an economic disaster, but also an ecological one. There has been a, ongoing civil war within the U.S. Forest Service between the professional foresters who understand the need for fuel reduction and benefits of intensive management versus the (sadly) growing legions of ecofascists whose degrees in gender studies and journalism leave them ill-prepared for any serious discussion of effective land management. Under the previous administration, the ecofascists gained a stranglehold, we are only now beginning to realize some relief. However, going back to the economic case, the State of Utah commissioned a formal economic study which can be found here: http://publiclands.utah.gov/plpco-releases-report-and-study-on-transfer-of-public-lands/

    As for the revenue cited in this article, the term is payment in lieu of taxes, or PILT. Since the local communities can no longer realize tax revenues from lands overtaken by the ecofascists, the federal government provide PILT. But the federal government has been reneging on its PILT obligations for quite some time, and even when they did fulfill their legal obligations, PILT left communities destitute – think of how well you would prosper if your job was outlawed and you had to depend on welfare payments – that’s PILT, and on a grand scale. Those communities were formed around, and dependent on, an economic base of natural resources. This state of total dependency is, of course, the true agenda – destroy an independent middle class and subjugate them to centralized authority governed by the central core of “elites.”

    Recently, Dwight and Steve Hammond were granted a pardon – that family had suffered “a long trains of abuses” and decades of persecution by agencies of the federal government, as did the Bundy family. But those are the few diehards – for every one of them there are tens of thousands of ranching families that have been displaced from their legal landholdings. In the instance of the Malheur “refuge” the federal government deliberately flooded private landholdings, taking them out of production and rendering them economically useless, then offered the landowners a pittance. Representatives of the State of Oregon are on public record for planning the “traffic stop” that resulted in the assassination of a rancher who was simply educating the public on their Constitutional rights. The state and federal authorities were not concerned about potential violence, but the spread of the message of liberty – that’s on record.

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