Data for this study were collected using a questionnaire mailed to randomly selected members of two forest owner organizations. Among the key findings is that 38% of forest estates owed federal estate tax, a rate many times higher than US estates in general. In 28% of the cases where estate tax was due, timber or land was sold because other assets were not adequate. In 29% of the cases where land was sold, it was converted to a more developed use. Questionnaires also were mailed to randomly selected individuals from a national database of rural landowners for comparison with forest owners. For most of the characteristics surveyed, there was no statistical difference between responses from the two groups.
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Greene, J. L., Bullard, S. H., Cushing, T. L., & Beauvais, T. (2006). Effect of the federal estate tax on nonindustrial private forest holdings. Journal of Forestry, 104(1), 15–20. https://doi.org/10.1093/jof/104.1.15
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