Are individual transferable quotas an adequate solution to overfishing and overcapacity? Evidence from Danish fisheries

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Are individual transferable quotas an adequate solution to overfishing and overcapacity? Evidence from Danish fisheries. / Merayo Garcia, Eugenia; Nielsen, Rasmus; Hoff, Ayoe; Nielsen, Max.

In: Marine Policy, Vol. 87, 2018, p. 167–176.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articlepeer-review

Harvard

Merayo Garcia, E, Nielsen, R, Hoff, A & Nielsen, M 2018, 'Are individual transferable quotas an adequate solution to overfishing and overcapacity? Evidence from Danish fisheries', Marine Policy, vol. 87, pp. 167–176. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.marpol.2017.08.032

APA

Merayo Garcia, E., Nielsen, R., Hoff, A., & Nielsen, M. (2018). Are individual transferable quotas an adequate solution to overfishing and overcapacity? Evidence from Danish fisheries. Marine Policy, 87, 167–176. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.marpol.2017.08.032

Vancouver

Merayo Garcia E, Nielsen R, Hoff A, Nielsen M. Are individual transferable quotas an adequate solution to overfishing and overcapacity? Evidence from Danish fisheries. Marine Policy. 2018;87:167–176. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.marpol.2017.08.032

Author

Merayo Garcia, Eugenia ; Nielsen, Rasmus ; Hoff, Ayoe ; Nielsen, Max. / Are individual transferable quotas an adequate solution to overfishing and overcapacity? Evidence from Danish fisheries. In: Marine Policy. 2018 ; Vol. 87. pp. 167–176.

Bibtex

@article{fadc7d1d0e1f4d188857a563eeea7cf8,
title = "Are individual transferable quotas an adequate solution to overfishing and overcapacity? Evidence from Danish fisheries",
abstract = "Individual Transferable Quotas stand in large parts of the fisheries economic literature as the panacea that solves all problems of overfishing and overcapacity of world´s fisheries. However, they are also criticized by a number of authors based on their negative social effects. Individual Transferable Quotas have been increasingly used during the past decades and are the main management system in a number of countries today. This paper provides evidence of the economic, social and environmental effects of one such system ten years after its introduction in Danish fisheries starting in 2003 with herring and being fully implemented from 2007. It is found that together with an important reduction in the fleet size, economic profitability improved. The direct contribution to GDP from the fleet in terms of economic return increased and indirectly through the capital and labour released from the fisheries sector, which have been absorbed by other sectors. Full-time employment has been reduced by 68% with fishermen salary largely unchanged, which might have affected the social cohesion in the local fishing communities negatively. However, no significant difference in the evolution of unemployment in local fishing communities compared to the national average was found. The Danish experience proves that Individual Transferable Quotas can be an adequate solution with regards to overfishing and overcapacity with also positive effects on the environment due to reduced fuel consumption and fishing activity. The social effects are ambiguous seeing that fisheries employment decreases; however, unemployment rates in the affected communities are below the national average.",
author = "{Merayo Garcia}, Eugenia and Rasmus Nielsen and Ayoe Hoff and Max Nielsen",
year = "2018",
doi = "10.1016/j.marpol.2017.08.032",
language = "English",
volume = "87",
pages = "167–176",
journal = "Marine Policy",
issn = "0308-597X",
publisher = "Pergamon Press",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Are individual transferable quotas an adequate solution to overfishing and overcapacity? Evidence from Danish fisheries

AU - Merayo Garcia, Eugenia

AU - Nielsen, Rasmus

AU - Hoff, Ayoe

AU - Nielsen, Max

PY - 2018

Y1 - 2018

N2 - Individual Transferable Quotas stand in large parts of the fisheries economic literature as the panacea that solves all problems of overfishing and overcapacity of world´s fisheries. However, they are also criticized by a number of authors based on their negative social effects. Individual Transferable Quotas have been increasingly used during the past decades and are the main management system in a number of countries today. This paper provides evidence of the economic, social and environmental effects of one such system ten years after its introduction in Danish fisheries starting in 2003 with herring and being fully implemented from 2007. It is found that together with an important reduction in the fleet size, economic profitability improved. The direct contribution to GDP from the fleet in terms of economic return increased and indirectly through the capital and labour released from the fisheries sector, which have been absorbed by other sectors. Full-time employment has been reduced by 68% with fishermen salary largely unchanged, which might have affected the social cohesion in the local fishing communities negatively. However, no significant difference in the evolution of unemployment in local fishing communities compared to the national average was found. The Danish experience proves that Individual Transferable Quotas can be an adequate solution with regards to overfishing and overcapacity with also positive effects on the environment due to reduced fuel consumption and fishing activity. The social effects are ambiguous seeing that fisheries employment decreases; however, unemployment rates in the affected communities are below the national average.

AB - Individual Transferable Quotas stand in large parts of the fisheries economic literature as the panacea that solves all problems of overfishing and overcapacity of world´s fisheries. However, they are also criticized by a number of authors based on their negative social effects. Individual Transferable Quotas have been increasingly used during the past decades and are the main management system in a number of countries today. This paper provides evidence of the economic, social and environmental effects of one such system ten years after its introduction in Danish fisheries starting in 2003 with herring and being fully implemented from 2007. It is found that together with an important reduction in the fleet size, economic profitability improved. The direct contribution to GDP from the fleet in terms of economic return increased and indirectly through the capital and labour released from the fisheries sector, which have been absorbed by other sectors. Full-time employment has been reduced by 68% with fishermen salary largely unchanged, which might have affected the social cohesion in the local fishing communities negatively. However, no significant difference in the evolution of unemployment in local fishing communities compared to the national average was found. The Danish experience proves that Individual Transferable Quotas can be an adequate solution with regards to overfishing and overcapacity with also positive effects on the environment due to reduced fuel consumption and fishing activity. The social effects are ambiguous seeing that fisheries employment decreases; however, unemployment rates in the affected communities are below the national average.

U2 - 10.1016/j.marpol.2017.08.032

DO - 10.1016/j.marpol.2017.08.032

M3 - Journal article

VL - 87

SP - 167

EP - 176

JO - Marine Policy

JF - Marine Policy

SN - 0308-597X

ER -

ID: 185626359