Forecasting Resource-Allocation Decisions Under Climate Uncertainty: Fire Suppression with Assessment of Net Benefits of Research
Making input decisions under climate uncertainty often involves two-stage methods that use expensive and opaque transfer functions. This article describes an alternative, single-stage approach to such decisions using forecasting methods. The example shown is for preseason fire suppression resource contracting decisions faced by the United States Forest Service. Two-stage decision tools have been developed for these decisions, and we compare the expected gains to the agency, in terms of reduced personnel costs, of the single-stage model over the two-stage model, existing hiring decisions, and decisions that would have been made given perfect foresight about wildfire activity. Our analysis demonstrates the potential gains to versions of our single-stage model over existing hiring decisions, equivalent to a benefit-cost ratio of 22. The research also identified additional gains accruing from imposing biases on the single-stage model, associated with asymmetric penalties from contracting decisions. Copyright 2008, Oxford University Press.
Year of publication: |
2008
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Authors: | Prestemon, Jeffrey P. ; Donovan, Geoffrey H. |
Published in: |
American Journal of Agricultural Economics. - Agricultural and Applied Economics Association - AAEA. - Vol. 90.2008, 4, p. 1118-1129
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Publisher: |
Agricultural and Applied Economics Association - AAEA |
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