Controlling excess capacity in common-pool resource industries: the transition from input to output controls <link rid="fn1">*</link>
Overcapacity is a major problem in common-pool resources. Regulators increasingly turn from limited entry to individual transferable use rights to address overcapacity. Using individual vessel data from before and after the introduction of individual harvest rights into a fishery, the paper investigates how characteristics of rights, scale of operations and transition period affect changes in individual and fleet capacity utilisation and excess capacity. The results indicate that individual harvest rights in both theory and practice offer the potential to address the problem of overcapacity in common-pool resources currently managed with limited-entry regulations. Copyright 2010 The Authors. Journal compilation 2010 Australian Agricultural and Resource Economics Society Inc. and Blackwell Publishing Asia Pty Ltd.
Year of publication: |
2010
|
---|---|
Authors: | Squires, Dale ; Jeon, Yongil ; Grafton, R. Quentin ; Kirkley, James |
Published in: |
Australian Journal of Agricultural and Resource Economics. - Australian Agricultural and Resource Economics Society - AARES. - Vol. 54.2010, 3, p. 361-377
|
Publisher: |
Australian Agricultural and Resource Economics Society - AARES |
Saved in:
Saved in favorites
Similar items by person
-
Squires, Dale, (2010)
-
Turning the tide? : Private property rights and the crisis in fisheries management
Grafton, R. Quentin, (1995)
-
Private property rights and crises in world fisheries : turning the tide?
Grafton, R. Quentin, (1996)
- More ...