It's called "landowners can pay people to farm their land."
It’s incredibly successful where it’s used. And it’s a big part of my own family story.
My great-grandpa lost his farm in the Great Depression. The bank took his land & cows- but not his hay baler!
So he hit the road and cut+baled other farmers' hay for hire.
His "Uber but for hay baling" hustle put my grandma and great-uncle through college!
“Pay people to work” might sound obvious!
But in most of US ag, it’s not. Instead, people who want to farm but don’t have land usually rent it. That’s called tenant farming.
It tends to bake in wealth inequality- and abuse land, bc nobody's incentivized to take good are of it.