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NOAA FISHERIES: Office of Science and Technology
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Economic Perspective and the Evolution of Fisheries Management: Towards Subjectivist Methodology

Abstract

Some perspectives of neo-institutional economics are used to reexamine the common pool fishery. Applications of property rights theory in models simulating the evolution of fisheries management suggest that even in the presence of positive information and transactions costs (ITCs), resource users may have incentives to sequentially negotiate rules of common pool use. Such a result might imply that fisheries managers should be more concerned with ITCs than inefficiencies due to overcapitalization. This impression is further reinforced in collective choice examples taken from U.S. fisheries management. These comparative cases of public decision making in New England and Alaska suggest that variations in the style of public management as well as other aspects such as fleet heterogeneity might cause variations in management effectiveness. These variations in effectiveness may be related to the ITC environment internal to the public agencies, as well as to the external ITC environment they face.

Source: Wilson, J.R. and R. Lent. 1994. “Economic perspective and the evolution of fisheries management: towards subjectivist methodology.” Marine Resource Economics, 9(4): 353-373.

For more information, please contact: Rebecca.Lent@noaa.gov

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