Enquirica Research Continues to Believe That Saskatchewan Farm Land Remains Undervalued in Relation to Global Market

Enquirica Research Believes that Saskatchewan Farm Land Remains Undervalued in Relation to Global Market. “Birth of a Boom: Saskatchewan’s Dawning Age” author calls for farm land ownership liberalization and believes the regulatory barriers may have been a cause of lower prices.

Calgary, Canada, October 23, 2011 --(PR.com)-- Enquirica Research Believes that Saskatchewan Farm Land Remains Undervalued in Relation to Global Market. “Birth of a Boom: Saskatchewan’s Dawning Age” author calls for farm land ownership liberalization. Seymour argues that “Saskatchewan farm land is highly undervalued in comparison to farm land in Alberta, Manitoba and the U.S. border states.”

Director of the Saskatchewan office of the Frontier Centre for Public Policy, Seymour argues ownership restrictions on farm land have kept prices artificially low given the relative productive value of Saskatchewan farm land. According to Seymour, policies that limit farm land ownership in Saskatchewan tend to reduce capital investment and limited productivity in the province’s agriculture sector. Seymour recommends in his book that the province continue to liberalize farm land ownership rules, a process that began in 2003 with the opening of farm land ownership to non-Saskatchewan residents. This 2003 reform, however, left Saskatchewan farm land ownership closed to non-Canadian residents.

Seymour delivered the keynote address at the upcoming Alternative Investment Conference on September 17th in Calgary on why Saskatchewan could become the richest province in Canada.

Enquirica Research will be hosting the third Alternative Investment Conference at the Blackwood Inn Conference Center on January 28th 2012.

To register or to learn more about the conference, visit www.realassetsrealreturns.com.

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