Foreigners own more US farmland

Foreigners own more U.S. farmland
Oct 9, 2009 10:35 AM

Foreigners have an interest (partial or total ownership) in 1.6 percent of all privately held U.S. agricultural land and 0.92 percent of all land in the United States, according to a recent USDA’s report. The total is a 1.4 million acre increase from 2007.
The report contains statistics on the 20.9 million acres of U.S. agricultural land in which foreign persons held an interest through Feb. 28, 2008.

The report, titled “Foreign Holdings of U.S. Agricultural Land,” is available on the FSA Website.
The report includes a wide variety of figures and statistics, including:

• A breakdown of land held by foreigners by the type of acreage: forest land, 58 percent; cropland, 13 percent; pasture and other agricultural land, 26 percent
• Which countries have foreigners holding the largest amount of land: Canadians hold the largest amount of land with almost 7.3 million acres, or 34 percent.

• People from these three countries collectively hold more than 6.7 million acres, or 31 percent of the foreign held acres in the U.S.: Netherlands, almost 3.9 million acres (18 percent); United Kingdom, over 1.5 million acres (7 percent); and Germany, almost 1.4 million acres (6 percent).
The proportions of foreign-owned agricultural land to all privately owned agricultural land by state:

• Maine has the largest amount of foreign held U.S. agricultural land at 3.35 million acres, or 18.7 percent of the privately held agricultural land in the state.
• In Hawaii, 8.8 percent of private agricultural land is foreign held.

• Washington (7.2 percent), Nevada (5.2 percent), and Alabama (5.1 percent) have the next largest proportions of foreign held land.
The publication’s findings are based on reports submitted in compliance with the Agricultural Foreign Investment Disclosure Act of 1978 (AFIDA). The law was created to establish a nationwide system for the collection of information pertaining to foreign ownership in U.S. agricultural land. The AFIDA regulation requires foreign investors who acquire, transfer or hold an interest (other than a security interest) in U.S. agricultural land to report such holdings and transactions to the secretary of agriculture on an AFIDA Report Form FSA-153. The data gained from these disclosures is used in the preparation of an annual report to Congress.

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Delta Farm Press | Oct 9, 2009

Foreigners have an interest (partial or total ownership) in 1.6 percent of all privately held U.S. agricultural land and 0.92 percent of all land in the United States, according to a recent USDA’s report. The total is a 1.4 million acre increase from 2007.

The report contains statistics on the 20.9 million acres of U.S. agricultural land in which foreign persons held an interest through Feb. 28, 2008.

The report, titled “Foreign Holdings of U.S. Agricultural Land,” is available on the FSA Website.

The report includes a wide variety of figures and statistics, including:

  • A breakdown of land held by foreigners by the type of acreage: forest land, 58 percent; cropland, 13 percent; pasture and other agricultural land, 26 percent
  • Which countries have foreigners holding the largest amount of land: Canadians hold the largest amount of land with almost 7.3 million acres, or 34 percent.
  • People from these three countries collectively hold more than 6.7 million acres, or 31 percent of the foreign held acres in the U.S.: Netherlands, almost 3.9 million acres (18 percent); United Kingdom, over 1.5 million acres (7 percent); and Germany, almost 1.4 million acres (6 percent).
The proportions of foreign-owned agricultural land to all privately owned agricultural land by state:

  • Maine has the largest amount of foreign held U.S. agricultural land at 3.35 million acres, or 18.7 percent of the privately held agricultural land in the state.
  • In Hawaii, 8.8 percent of private agricultural land is foreign held.
  • Washington (7.2 percent), Nevada (5.2 percent), and Alabama (5.1 percent) have the next largest proportions of foreign held land.
The publication’s findings are based on reports submitted in compliance with the Agricultural Foreign Investment Disclosure Act of 1978 (AFIDA). The law was created to establish a nationwide system for the collection of information pertaining to foreign ownership in U.S. agricultural land. The AFIDA regulation requires foreign investors who acquire, transfer or hold an interest (other than a security interest) in U.S. agricultural land to report such holdings and transactions to the secretary of agriculture on an AFIDA Report Form FSA-153. The data gained from these disclosures is used in the preparation of an annual report to Congress.

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