The Effect of Marine Protected Areas on Fishers' Income in the Philippines


Autoria(s): Samonte, Giselle PB.; Ramenzoni, Victoria C.; Dacles, Terence U.; Fortenbacher, Dominik
Data(s)

25/05/2016

Resumo

The fisheries sector is vital to the Philippine economy, providing substantial employment and income, contributing export earnings, and meeting local food security and nutrition requirements. To protect coastal and marine habitat and to sustain fisheries, over 1000 marine protected areas (MPAs) have been established, in the Philippines. This paper provides empirical evidence on the variance of net revenues linked with MPA establishment and the possible range of relocation costs for fishing effort displaced by an MPA. A total of 424 households were randomly selected from 18 barangays (villages) adjacent to MPAs in three regions in the Philippines. Results show that incomes decrease significantly for both fulltime and seasonal types of fishers after 1-3 years of MPA establishment. The loss occurring through MPA is higher than expected and at least on the short run (up to 4 years) the spill-over effect does not compensate. This information helped to determine the necessary conditional cash transfers for coastal communities who are highly dependent on coastal and marine resources.

Formato

application/pdf

Identificador

http://cbe.miis.edu/joce/vol3/iss1/2

http://cbe.miis.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1032&context=joce

Publicador

Digital Commons @ Center for the Blue Economy

Fonte

Journal of Ocean and Coastal Economics

Palavras-Chave #marine protected areas #fishing income #socioeconomics #Natural Resource Economics #Natural Resources Management and Policy
Tipo

text