Forest Taxation in the United States


Book Description

Taxation imposes a burden on all forms of enterprise. The business of growing forests carry a reasonable share of the load. It is widely believed that the existing tax system imposes more than a reasonable share on forestry and discourages the use of private land for this purpose. This report contains the more important results of a Forest Service investigation on this subject. It presents a background of facts about the existing methods of taxation and their relation to forestry. It weighs the effects of taxation on forest management. It develops the principles of sound forest taxation.




Forest Valuation


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Forest Valuation


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Vermont's Use Value Appraisal Property Tax Program


Book Description

S2Vermonts Use Value Appraisal (UVA) property tax program was designed to slow the rate of development of rural land, encourage prediction from agricultural and forest lands, and conserve and preserve a working rural landscape by making taxation of underdeveloped land more equitable. In 1987, more than 669,000 acres were enrolled in the UVA Forest Land Program, 18 percent of the potentially eligible forest land. Forest inventory statistics were produced for these lands using data collected in the fourth forest survey of Vermont. UVA forest land comprises slightly more than a billion cubic feet of growing stock, including 2.2 million board feet of sawtimber. Forest inventory data indicate that timberland in the UVA program mirrors Vermont timberland in general. It does not appear that a disproportionate amount of poor sites or good sites are enrolled. Nor does the quantity or quality of the timber appear to be disproportionately representative. The projected net growth on UVA timberland could supply almost half the annual removals in the State. S3.













Forest Taxation


Book Description