Washington Is the World's Largest Landowner. Can Federal Land Sales Erase the National Debt?
By Ward Clark | 2:10 PM on December 26, 2024The United States federal government is one of, if not the, largest debtors on the planet, currently holding $36 trillion in debt. That's a "T" followed by a "rillion."
The United States federal government is also one of, if not the, largest landowner on the planet, currently holding over 615 million acres through various agencies, like the Bureau of Land Management, the Forest Service, various national parks and monuments, and so on.
Thomas Sowell, economist, economic philosopher, commentator, senior fellow at the Hoover Institution, professor of economics at several major universities, and one of the smartest people on the planet, has proposed a way that one of these things can be used to help address the other.
In short: Sales of federal land could be used to pay down the debt.
There is much to be said for the new administration’s plan to have a nongovernmental organization investigate how well, or how badly, government agencies are currently handling the taxpayers’ money. But there is a limit to how much money can be recovered by simply cutting back on “waste, fraud and abuse” in federal spending.
There are, however, additional billions of dollars that could be tapped, from a source that not many people think about. That is the vast—almost unbelievable—amount of land owned by the federal government. Some of that land—such as military bases—is used to house the government’s own operations. But the great majority of that land is not.
We aren't talking a few hundred acres, either. The Western states in particular include a lot of federal lands. Nevada is 80 percent federal land. Utah, 63 percent, Idaho, 62 percent, and Alaska (amazingly) is in 4th place, with 60.9 percent - although we have far and away the greatest total amount, with over 222 million acres held by the federal government; that's about a third of the total amount of federal landholdings.
https://redstate.com/wardclark/2024/12/26/washington-is-the-worlds-largest-landowner-can-federal-land-sales-erase-the-national-debt-n2183628