C2o—Lancaster Farming, Saturday, July 12,1980 Farm Talk Absentee landowners aren’t all bad, particularly in today’s farm economy I could probably be shot for saying that in some places, and thr I'lay be one of those plac .1, but the financiers of < 6 r, culture - bankers, mvestors - nake a pretty persuasivr case for the merits of absentee farmland ownership When you’re talking about absentee landowners, you include a wide range of folks Everything from the widowed farm wife who’s gone to live with her sister m Tallahassee to the Philadelphia dentist looking for an inflation hedge, to the union pension fund manager who’s trying to maximize worker benefits, and to the land speculator who is looking for a quick buck To that list you can add a lot of other folks, up to and including some foreign in vestors who have faith in American farmland even though they don’t have much faith in the American dollar, or anything else American When you start drawing lines and deciding who should or should not own farmland, you enter mto a dangerous arena If you’re truly interested in protecting family farmers, then rules should say that no one can own farmland except family 299-3794 Gets you ‘Pit Stop’ service Whether you re having tire trouble in the field or you just need a little advice your local Pit Stop service man is as near as your phone One call to this number brings him right to your farm And with him come the tools and the training to get the job done fast What s more he offers you the most complete line of Goodyear farm tires around plus a wide range of important services to keep you rolling Whatever your particular tire needs may be you can rely on your Pit Stop man to be at your service whenever and wherever you need him JUST GIVE US OR YOUR LOCAL GOODYEAR DEALER A CALL! fIHHITIRE Complete Headquarters For Farm Truck and Auto Tires EJ^SSDICBfIB [gbzelter*s Farm Tire Center Jerry Webb farmers And obviously, that won’t work What happens to the family farmer when he passes on and none of his heirs want to continue in that business 7 I suppose you could pass a law that says the land must be sold to another family farmer, but that would certainly limit the bidding and hurt the u cirs who may have spent a lifetime developing that unit and who are entitled to its full value What about the sons and daughters who inherit a farm but who are actively mvolved in other careers in other places and have no immediate plans to return to the home place 7 Should they be forced to sell to a local farmer just to preserve the tradition of family farming 7 What’s wrong with them continuing to own that land and renting it to a local family farmer who wants to expand 7 Or for that matter, what’s wrong with a farmer wan- , ting to retire and sell out to whoever will pay him the most money 7 Maybe it’s an investment company or maybe a land speculator Maybe the farmer next door All of them are potential buyers, so why not let the one with the strongest desire buy the property 7 1062 MANHEIM PIKE, LANCASTER, PA One of the unique things about a farm is that when it changes ownership it usually remains in farming Suie there are pressures t. lake farmland out of pioduction and use it foi other things, but that pressure is pretty much confined to some fairly small areas of urban growth and to places where eminent domain takes priority regardless of who owns it Meanwhile, farms tha are sold to off-farm investors usually remain as farming units to be rented to neighboring farmers who need the land for their own expansion plans Really, those farmers benefit High land rents are seldom high enough to cover the true cost ot ownership and sr •; r rent are able to expand less than retail cost. Occasionally farmland is bought up by large conglomerates who want to go into the farming business It happens often enough to keep the myth alive, but in practice it’s a rare oc currence. Seldom does a large off-farm corporation buy up a bunch of land and set up a farming business. If anything, the trend is m the other direction--of corporations selling off their farmland and getting out of farming And who’s buying those corporate farms’ In many instances, it’s the neigh borhood farmers Usually they’re bidding against investors who are hoping to ride the land in flation phenomena into a tidy profit Meanwhile, the PRE-OWNED HARVESTOftE 20x60 With Hercules Unloader Call Penn Jersey HARVESTORE Systems. Inc. (717)334-4031 GOODfVEAR neighboring fanners till the land So unlike a rare painting that ->ukl once in a lifetime for some phenomenal price and is then whisked off to a gallery in some faraway place, a farm is sold and stays a farm The opeiator may change and perhaps some of the kinds of farming that once occurred disap pear But each spring the MUSSELMAN LUMBER INC. __2oo BRIMMER AVENUE, NEW HOLLAND, PA HHI Phone 717-354-4321 Hours; Doily TAM to 5 PM, Saturday 7 AM to 12 PM ground is plowed, the crops are planted and the productivity in that farming area continues One real estate expert 1 read recently makes a strong case for the off-farm investor, saying that without him large farm corporations will appear, the family farm will disappear, and land values will fall. Bert Hanson, an lowa farm realtor, claims the investor is a steadying in fluence on farmland prices and is really no threat to the family farm. As evidence, he cites the fact that 90 percent of all farm purchases are made by farmers and that the investor never pays as much for land as the farmer, except in very unusual circumstances (Turn to Page C2l) \^!sr ; m