Strong Nonagricultural Demand Keeps Agricultural Land Values Increasing
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Keywords

FE625

How to Cite

Reynolds, John E. 2019. “Strong Nonagricultural Demand Keeps Agricultural Land Values Increasing: FE625/FE625, 1/2006”. EDIS 2006 (1). Gainesville, FL. https://doi.org/10.32473/edis-fe625-2006.

Abstract

The Florida Land Value Survey, conducted by the Food and Resource Economics Department at the University of Florida, provides estimates of the value of different types of agricultural land for geographic regions of the state. The survey questionnaire was designed to obtain estimates of the market value for different types of land as of May 2005. Survey respondents included rural appraisers, farm lenders, real estate brokers, farm managers, land investors, county extension agents, personnel from the Farm Services Agency and the Natural Resource Conservation Service, county property appraisers, and other persons who develop and maintain information about rural land values in their areas. Respondents provided 185 usable county reports for the 2005 survey. This document is FE625, one of a series of the Food and Resource Economics Department, UF/IFAS Extension. Original publication date January 2006.

FE625/FE625: Strong Nonagricultural Demand Keeps Agricultural Land Values Increasing (2005) (ufl.edu)

https://doi.org/10.32473/edis-fe625-2006
view on EDIS
PDF-2006

References

Reynolds, John E. 2004. Nonagricultural Demand Causes Agricultural Land Values to Increase. Electronic Digital Information Source (EDIS) FE545, Food and Resource Economics Department, University of Florida, Gainesville, FL. http://edis.ifas.ufl.edu/FE545, and at http://www.agbuscenter.ifas.ufl.edu/landuse (University of Florida IFAS Extension FE545).

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