Small-scale coastal fisheries and co-management
In: Marine policy, Band 18, Heft 4, S. 306-313
ISSN: 0308-597X
5 Ergebnisse
Sortierung:
In: Marine policy, Band 18, Heft 4, S. 306-313
ISSN: 0308-597X
In: Marine policy: the international journal of ocean affairs, Band 18, Heft 4, S. 306-313
ISSN: 0308-597X
In: Marine policy, Band 16, Heft 6, S. 438-450
ISSN: 0308-597X
In: Environment and development economics, Band 8, Heft 1, S. 105-127
ISSN: 1469-4395
Excess capacity and overfishing are problems in the open-access, common-pool fisheries of the Java Sea. Data development analysis is used to estimate excess fishing capacity and the number of vessels to decommission in three Java Sea fisheries of Indonesia, the purse seine, mini purse seine, and longline. First- and second-best policy measures are discussed to reduce the excess capacity and give sustainable management and development. The importance of incentive design, asymmetric information, and the regulator's principal–agent problem are emphasized in license limitation programs.
In: Environment and development economics, Band 10, Heft 6, S. 837-859
ISSN: 1469-4395
The relationship between productive efficiency and sustainable development of fishing industries in developing countries has received little attention. Ill-structured property rights in common-pool resources lead to a contradiction between private and social technical efficiency, with private and social costs dependent on the level of technical efficiency. Development policies that increase private efficiency can increase the social cost with ill-structured property rights and common-pool resources, and thereby increase social inefficiency. This paper examines this relationship through a case study of the mini purse seine fishery of the Java Sea, and finds that private technical efficiency does not depend on any measurable attributes of human capital, diverges substantially between the peak and off seasons, and differs between vessels more within the off season.