P. Gretton et U. Salma, LAND DEGRADATION - LINKS TO AGRICULTURAL OUTPUT AND PROFITABILITY, AUSTRALIAN JOURNAL OF AGRICULTURAL AND RESOURCE ECONOMICS, 41(2), 1997, pp. 209-225
To understand land degradation and assess policy responses, knowledge
is needed of the bio-physical causes, the economic effects on farms an
d the incentives farmers face to avoid or ameliorate the degradation.
An empirical study of land degradation in the Australian state of New
South Wales is presented in this article. The results suggest that the
re are incentives for farmers to co-exist with certain forms of degrad
ation, while there are also incentives to avoid some other forms.