Why Economists Reject Long-Term Fisheries Management Plans?


Autoria(s): Da Rocha, José María; Gutiérrez Huerta, María José
Data(s)

31/01/2012

31/01/2012

01/08/2009

Resumo

Most fisheries agencies conduct biological and economic assessments independently. This independent conduct may lead to situations in which economists reject management plans proposed by biologists. The objective of this study is to show how to find optimal strategies that may satisfy biologists and economists' conditions. In particular we characterize optimal fishing trajectories that maximize the present value of a discounted economic indicator taking into account the age-structure of the population as in stock assessment methodologies. This approach is applied to the Northern Stock of Hake. Our main empirical findings are: i) Optimal policy may be far away from any of the classical scenarios proposed by biologists, ii) The more the future is discounted, the higher the likelihood of finding contradictions among scenarios proposed by biologists and conclusions from economic analysis, iii) Optimal management reduces the risk of the stock falling under precautionary levels, especially if the future is not discounted to much, and iv) Optimal stationary fishing rate may be very different depending on the economic indicator used as reference.

Identificador

1988-088X

http://hdl.handle.net/10810/6575

RePEc:ehu:dfaeii:200903

Idioma(s)

eng

Publicador

University of the Basque Country, Department of Foundations of Economic Analysis II

Relação

DFAEII 2009.03

Direitos

info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess

Palavras-Chave #fisheries management #age-structured models #discounting #Fmsy #Fmax #northern stock of hake
Tipo

info:eu-repo/semantics/workingPaper