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Developing a microsimulation model for farm forestry planting decisions
Author(s) -
Mary Ryan,
Cathal O’Donoghue
Publication year - 2018
Publication title -
˜the œinternational journal of microsimulation
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 1747-5864
DOI - 10.34196/ijm.00199
Subject(s) - microdata (statistics) , microsimulation , counterfactual thinking , agriculture , renting , economics , agricultural land , land use , greenhouse gas , natural resource economics , agricultural economics , geography , engineering , census , transport engineering , ecology , population , philosophy , civil engineering , demography , archaeology , epistemology , sociology , biology
There is increasing pressure in Europe to convert land from agriculture to forestry which would enable the sequestration of additional carbon, thereby mitigating agricultural greenhouse gas production. However, there is little or no information available on the drivers of the land use change decision from agriculture to forestry at individual farm level, which is complicated by the inter-temporal nature of the decision. This paper describes a static microsimulation approach which provides a better understanding of the life-cycle relativity of forestry and agricultural incomes, using Ireland as a case-study. The microsimulation methodology allows for the generation of actual and counterfactual forest and agricultural income streams and for other attributes of utility such as long-term wealth and leisure, for the first time. These attributes are then modelled using purpose built forest models and farm microdata from a 30 year longitudinal dataset. The results show the importance of financial drivers but additionally show that wealth and leisure are also important factors in this inter-temporal land use change decision.

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