Let me put it another way.
Hunter A lives in rural Missouri and has a good job. He works hard, and he's smart and is able to afford a nice house and puts 15% of his money away every year to buy land.
Hunter B lives in San Diego (yuck) and has the exact same job and home and lives an equivalent lifestyle. He also put's 15% of his money away to buy land.
As long as hunter A and hunter B stay in their respective areas, they are competing against other buyers who have roughly equal income opportunities and thus there is a cap on how high the land goes. Each hunter can work harder and sacrifice harder than their neighbors and reap the rewards.
Once hunter B ventures into hunter A's area, his 15% is now superior to hunter A giving him a large buying advantage. If you play this same scenario over enough times, all the land is owned by out of area owners.
I'd rather not see that scenario play out. I think it's better for everyone if locals can access the resource. That's why I think states should cater to their residents. That is one way to even the playing field for the locals with less resources.