antlerradar
Well-known member
Make the payment contingent on both the number of hunters and the quality of the land enrolled. For instance in eastern Montana one section of river bottom may contain as much game as 10 sections of sagebrush and open grassland a few miles away. Outfitters and hunt clubs recognize this and pay accordingly. With BM you are going to have crowding and issues with game leaving if you try to stuff as many hunters into the one section as you can the 10 so it is harder to get a competitive payment with BM on the river bottom land. The result is the the landowner with lower quality grassland the may enroll in BM and the best quality land is leased by others.BM is a strange economic experiment. The payment isn’t made directly by hunters. The landowner controls the capacity. There is no way for the hunter to increase the payment or the landowner to charge more, so you never figure out the elasticity of supply or demand. I agree with your conclusions, but I don’t see an easy solution. I also wonder how many landowners hit the $15,000 cap. I know a few that probably did.