1 Overcoming the Common Pool Problem through Voluntary Cooperation: The Rise and Fall of a Fishery Cooperative Robert T. Deacon  †, Dominic P. Parker.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
My Background Presented By Tom Wooding Started fishing at age 8. Began fishing in Area M at 13. Became skipper at 18. Received a BSME at 22. Constructed.
Advertisements

Workshop: Monitoring and Evaluation of Harvest on Columbia River Salmonids July 31- August 1, 2007.
Renewable Common-Pool Resources: Fisheries and Other Commercially Valuable Species Chapter 14.
NAAFE FORUM: ENSURING FISHERIES BENEFITS FOR ALL GENERATIONS DISCIPLINARY AND PERSONAL PERSPECTIVES ON “ THE FISHERIES PROBLEM ” by James E. Wilen Department.
Issues in fisheries sustainability
Dept. of Economics U NIVERSITY of A LASKA A NCHORAGE Fisheries and Experimental Economics aka “The Beans Game” Gunnar Knapp Jim Murphy.
Human Response Ecosystem Based Management. Kinds of human response Fishing Fleets – When to fish – Where to fish – Discarding – Investment in gear – Response.
Fisheries. efficient harvests biology biology economic economic.
Stock Status of Steelhead in Alaska By Steve Hoffman ADF&G Sport Fish Ketchikan, Alaska.
1 Political Economy and the Choice of Fishery Management Strategies Robert T. Deacon University of California, Santa Barbara Resources for the Future World.
West Coast Electronic Fishery Information Systems Workshop Sheraton Portland Airport May 3-4, 2011 Overview, Issues, and Workshop Objectives Gil Sylvia.
The economics of fishery management The role of economics in fishery regulation.
The development of the Icelandic fisheries in the post- war era closely followed the path predicted for common property fisheries. They exhibit increasingly.
Bert Willems Cournot Competition, Financial Option Markets and Efficiency.
 Homework #8 Due Thursday  Quiz #4 Thursday Nov. 17 th  Homework #9 Thursday Nov. 17 th  Group Outline due Thursday Nov. 17th  Exam #4 Dec. 1st.
 Homework #8 Due Thursday  Quiz #4 Thursday Nov. 17 th  Homework #9 Thursday Nov. 17 th  Group Outline due Thursday Nov. 17th  Exam #4 Dec. 1st.
Grafton, Squires, and Fox. Private Property and Economic Efficiency: A study of a common-pool resource. B.C. halibut fishery provides a natural experiment.
Income Targeting and the Evolution of a Fishery John Lynham and David Siegel F-cubed meeting, Jan. 24 th, 2007.
Non-cooperative game theory: Three fisheries games Marko Lindroos JSS.
ERE7: Renewable Resources Fisheries Growth rates in biological resources Steady-state harvest –Perfect market –Open access Dynamic harvesting Policy intervention.
Inherent Uncertainties in Nearshore Fisheries: The Biocomplexity of Flow, Fish and Fishing Dave Siegel 1, Satoshi Mitarai 1, Crow White 1, Heather Berkley.
1 Fishery Cooperatives: What do They Achieve? What determines success? Robert T. Deacon University of California, Santa Barbara Resources for the Future.
Will spatial property rights lead to ocean conservation? Christopher Costello Bren School – UC Santa Barbara California and the World Ocean September 9,
Inherent Uncertainties in Nearshore Fisheries: The Biocomplexity of Flow, Fish and Fishing Dave Siegel 1, Satoshi Mitarai 1, Crow White 1, Heather Berkley.
Image: Michael Robinson Geography Department UC Santa Barbara Fisherman Behavior and Fishery Management: A Cooperative Investigation.
Image: Michael Robinson Geography Department UC Santa Barbara Fisherman Behavior and Fishery Management: A Cooperative Investigation.
Fishing in a stirred ocean: sustainable harvest can increase spatial variation in fish populations Heather Berkley Bruce Kendall, David Siegel, Christopher.
Managing the Fishery How can we regulate the fishery to avoid problems of open access?
Can Conservation Easements Work in a Marine Setting? An Economic Analysis under Four Regulatory Regimes Robert Deacon Dominic Parker December 3, 2007.
Can property rights solve fisheries collapse? Christopher Costello* Associate Professor – Resource Economics Bren School Advisory Board Address: April.
 Homework #8 due Wednesday  Homework #9 due next Wednesday  Quiz #4 Wednesday Nov. 14 th  Group Outline due Wed. Nov. 14th.
 Homework #8 due today  Homework #9 due next Wednesday  Quiz #4 Wednesday Nov. 14 th  Group Outline due Wed. Nov. 14 th  Exam #4 Wed. Nov 28 th 
Issues for Federal Fisheries off Alaska By Ron Felthoven Economics and Social Sciences Research Program Alaska Fisheries Science Center.
Compatibility of Commercial Trip Limits and Recreational Bag Limits in the Management Area of St. Croix, USVI Regulatory Amendment 2 Queen Conch Fishery.
Business Models for Marketing Agricultural Products.
Fishery Income Diversification and Risk for West Coast Fishermen and Fishing Communities Dan Holland – Northwest Fisheries Science Center Steve Kasperski.
The Achievements of the Pacific “Whiting Conservation Cooperative” Rational Collaboration in a Sea of Irrational Competition Gil Sylvia Marine Resource.
Buy-Back Programs in the British Columbia Salmon Fishery By R. Quentin Grafton and Harry W. Nelson International Workshop on Fishing Vessel and License.
Copyright © 2009 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved. Chapter 14 Renewable Common- Pool Resources: Fisheries and Other Commercially Valuable Species.
Dept. of Economics U NIVERSITY of A LASKA A NCHORAGE Demonstration Experiment.
Pacific Fishery Management Council Jurisdiction –3 miles to 200 miles –4 states (includes Idaho) Members -- appointed –State governments –Federal Agencies.
AGEC/FNR 406 LECTURE 28 North Atlantic Cod Biomass Index (Source: FAO)
Dept. of Economics U NIVERSITY of A LASKA A NCHORAGE Voluntary Approaches to Transitioning from Competitive Fisheries to Rights-Based Management: An Experimental.
Spatial fisheries management for conservation and profitability Christopher Costello* University of California and National Bureau of Economic Research.
Cap and Trade: The Technology Adoption Problem May 4, 2009 Economic Games and Mechanisms to Address Climate Change Suzanne Scotchmer University of California.
Fleet dynamics of the SW Indian Ocean tuna Fishery : a bioeconomic approach Main results September 2013 C. Chaboud.
Exam 2 review. resource economics nonrenewable vs. renewable –maximize pv of net benefit –renewable includes growth functions characterize efficient allocations.
Fish and Game Commission Meeting December 11, 2013 Marci Yaremko State/Federal Fisheries Program Marine Region 1 Photo: Edgar Roberts.
Fisheries 101: Modeling and assessments to achieve sustainability Training Module July 2013.
Steve Gaines Bren School of Environmental Science & Management Sustainable Fisheries Group UC Santa Barbara12 May 2011.
Renewable Common-Pool Resources: Fisheries and Other Commercially Valuable Species.
Chapter 14 Renewable Common-Pool Resources: Fisheries and Other Commercially Valuable Species.
Pricing behaviour of cooperatives and investor-owned dairies in a spatial market setting Yvonne Zavelberg Hugo Storm
The Fishery Resource: Biological and Economic Models Wednesday, April 12.
Copyright © 2009 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved.
1 Lisa Hutchinson-Scarbrough Division of Subsistence Alaska Department of Fish and Game Chignik Management Area Subsistence Salmon Fisheries Overview Chignik.
Managing the Fishery How can we regulate the fishery to avoid problems of open access?
Consider a very simple setting: a fish stock is harvested by two symmetric (identical) players, which can be fishermen or fleets. 2.1 A Simple Non-cooperative.
Species Interactions in the Baltic Sea -An age structured model approach PhD Student Thomas Talund Thøgersen.
NMA course Marko Lindroos
The Chignik Salmon Cooperative
Special Session: Landing Obligation
Management Regulations
Growth rate (replacement) and size of the fish stock/pool
The relationship between governance and fisheries outcomes
Copyright © 2009 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved.
Skeena Fisheries Review and Update
Copyright © 2009 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved.
Sea Cucumbers Management
Renewable Common-Pool Resources: Fisheries and Other Commercially Valuable Species Chapter 14.
Presentation transcript:

1 Overcoming the Common Pool Problem through Voluntary Cooperation: The Rise and Fall of a Fishery Cooperative Robert T. Deacon  †, Dominic P. Parker ‡, and Christopher Costello   University of California, Santa Barbara  University of California, Santa Barbara † Resources for the Future ‡ Montana State University  NBER University of Oslo June 17, 2010

2 Collaborators (Costello is on the left)

3 What happened in Chignik … In 2001 some license holders petition to form a voluntary cooperative. Co-op is approved and assigned dedicated share of catch. Regulator separates seasons of co-op vs. independents. Co-op shares profits equally; appoints fleet manager to coordinate. Independents go about business as usual. Independents file suit against co-op; declared illegal after Other Alaska salmon fisheries operated under existing regulations (catch limit and season closure) throughout this period.

4 Research questions Are there gains from coordinating effort in harvesting a shared resource? What kinds of gains? How large? Is it possible to structure fishery ‘reform without losers’?

5 Fishery policy questions Why not just rely on ITQs? Slow to gain adoption; Dividing TAC is contentious; May leave some gains on the table. Allow a self-selected co-op to form, with dedicated share of TAC. Chignik Sockeye Salmon Cooperative

6 Related literature: Efficiency of ITQ systems: Boyce (JEEM, 1992); Hannesson (2004); Grafton, et al. (JLE, 2000); Costello and Deacon (MRE, 2007); Linn, Singh and Weninger (2008). Fisheries cooperatives and associations: Knapp (2002); Matulich, Sever and Inaba (MRE, 2001); Johnson and Libecap (AER, 1985).

7 Step 1: Model Model harvesters’ behavior as a 2-stage entry game. Stage 1: To join or not to join....? Stage 2:Co-op maximizes group’s profit; Independent fishermen take independent actions. Solve (backwards) for SP Nash equilibria Step 2: Empirics Test model’s predictions. Estimate co-op’s efficiency effects. Examine winners and losers.

8

9

10

11

12

13

14

15

16

17

18

19

20

21

22

23

24

25

26

27

28

29 Step 2 Empirics: Facts About Chignik Fishery One of Alaska’s oldest commercial fisheries (since 1880s) Purse seine fishing, with ~100 participants Managed by limited entry and season closures since 1974 Significant monopsony power; only 1 or 2 processors.

30 How the Co-op Worked in Practice Joiners sign 1-year contracts before season starts. Some members fish (22 out of 77) and are paid for effort. Profits after paying fishers are split equally. Elected board of directors and appointed manager to allocate effort. Motivated partly by intention to deliver higher quality product.

31 Map of Chignik Management Area on the Alaskan Peninsula

32 Map of Chignik Bay and Near Vicinities ‘Inside’ locations ‘Outside’ locations

33 Purse seiner Desiderata (fished for co-op)

34 Purse seiner completing set (August 2008)

35 Deck operations on Desiderata (unskilled labor, obviously)

36 Weir installed on Chignik R. each season for counting escapement.

37 Counting escapement

38 Counting escapement

39 Counting escapement

40 Step 2: Empirical Approach Compare outcomes in Chignik vs. other neighboring fisheries before & during co-op years Compare outcomes for co-op vs. independent groups Outcome variables: value of fishing permits proportion of permits fished fishing locations season lengths (speed of fishing) catch price Compare the attributes of joiners vs. independents Compile (anecdotal) info on public input provision

41

42

43

44

45

46 Evidence on co-op public inputs Precise distance and temporal control of effort, exploit tides; Centralized info on stock locations, dispatched effort; Coordinated effort in order to: match processor capacity (released live fish!) meet fishery manager’s goals; raise product quality (delivered live fish); Installed stationary ‘fixed leads’ (funnel) on migration route.

47 Approximate position of fixed leads ‘Fixed leads’

48

49

50

51

52 Thanks for the invitation!