Title of article
From Microlevel Decisions to Landscape Changes: An Assessment of Agricultural Conservation Policies
Author/Authors
K.، Tanaka, نويسنده , , J.، Wu, نويسنده , , R.M.، Adams نويسنده , , C.L.، Kling نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2004
Pages
-25
From page
26
To page
0
Abstract
The growth in conservation programs has created a need for modeling frameworks capable of measuring microlevel behavioral responses and macrolevel landscape changes. This paper presents an empirical model that predicts farmersʹ production practices and the resulting levels of agricultural runoffs at more than 42,000 agricultural sites in the upper-Mississippi river basin under alternative conservation policies. Results suggest that payments for conservation tillage and crop rotations increase the use of these conservation practices. However, the acreage response is inelastic and the programs are not likely to be cost effective on their own for addressing hypoxia problem in the Gulf of Mexico.
Keywords
Soil erosion , Agricultural policy , conservation practices , green payments , land-use changes , non-point pollution , nitrate runoff and leaching
Journal title
American Journal of Agricultural Economics
Serial Year
2004
Journal title
American Journal of Agricultural Economics
Record number
101371
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