124 ECONOMIC ESSAYS IN HONOR OF JOHN BATES CLARK
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that we have never before had a systematic discussion of urban
land economics. The economists have so generally confined them-
selves to agricultural land that when we use the term, land
economics, people are inclined to think that we are talking about
agricultural land.
The economics of forestry has already received discussion, and
it is justified by the peculiarities of forest land and the difficulties
to its wise utilization.
As the differentiation goes on in theory and practice, we find an
increasing number of kinds of land. Classification is, therefore,
essential in any discussion of land policies, and the classification
will vary with the purposes in view. For instance, from the
standpoint of utilization, land can be broadly classified into
agricultural, forest, mineral and urban land, and growing atten-
tion is being given to recreational land and also to water
resources.
The next natural division of land economics is a study of land
utilization. Classification and utilization are closely related and
interdependent. There are many uses competing for the land.
Agriculture, forests, mines, water resources, recreation facilities,
urban sites are all making demands upon the land. Obviously
the main problem here is to maintain the proper balance between
these competing uses. Then there is the question as to whether
the different demands necessarily conflict with each other or can
one use be made to serve two purposes as in Germany, where the
forest areas supply both a timber crop and recreational oppor-
tunities? It is for a national land policy, which has facts sup-
plied by scientific research behind it, to work out a program for
land utilization which can integrate or balance these separate
uses to produce the maximum economic benefits for society.
This problem of balance in relation to the land factor may be
considered from three angles. There is first of all the matter of
maintaining a balance between one form of land utilization and
another. The most clear-cut illustration is that afforded by the
use of land for the production of staple agricultural products
and for the production of trees. We have at present relative
overproduction of certain staple crops, which means prices so low
that farming is too generally carried on either without any profit
or with a very low rate as compared with returns in other indus-
tries. At the same time we have a relative underproduction of