Insect Population Dynamics, Pesticide Use, and Farmworker Health.
We address the impacts of regulations designed to reduce pesticide poisoning of farmers and farm laborers. Attention is concentrated on pre-harvest interval regulations that impose a time interval between pesticide application and harvest. The incidence of poisoning is determined by aggregate pesticide use, worker exposure, and toxicity. A dynamic, stochastic model of insect population growth is developed and used to measure the incentives for pesticide use. Increasing the pre-harvest interval has an ambiguous effect on the number of harvest worker poisonings. Pesticide taxation unambiguously reduces the number of worker poisonings. Theoretical results are quantified in a case study of mevinphos application on leaf lettuce in California's Salinas Valley. Copyright 2000 by American Agricultural Economics Association
Year of publication: |
2000
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Authors: | Sunding, David ; Zivin, Joshua |
Published in: |
American Journal of Agricultural Economics. - American Agricultural Economics Association. - Vol. 82.2000, 3, p. 527-40
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Publisher: |
American Agricultural Economics Association |
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