Via: NPR:
American soil.
Those are two words that are commonly used to stir up patriotic
feelings. They are also words that can’t be be taken for granted,
because today nearly 30 million acres of U.S. farmland are held by
foreign investors. That number has doubled in the past two decades,
which is raising alarm bells in farming communities.
When the stock market tanked during the last recession, foreign
investors began buying up big swaths of U.S. farmland. And because there
are no federal restrictions on the amount of land that can be
foreign-owned, it’s been left up to individual states to decide on any
limitations.
It’s likely that even more American land will end up in
foreign hands, especially in states with no restrictions on ownership.
With the median age of U.S. farmers at 55, many face retirement with no
prospect of family members willing to take over. The National Young
Farmers Coalition anticipates that two-thirds of the nation’s farmland
will change hands in the next few decades
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