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Cod today and none tomorrow: The economic value of a marine reserve

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Authors

Grafton, R. Quentin
Kompas, Tom
Pham, Van Ha

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Crawford School of Economics and Government, The Australian National University

Abstract

Using data from what was once one of the world’s largest capture fisheries the economic value of a marine reserve is calculated using a stochastic optimal control model with a jumpdiffusion process. The results show that with a stochastic environment an optimal-sized marine reserve can generate a triple payoff that (a), raises the resource rent even when harvesting is ‘optimal’, (b) decreases the recovery time for the biomass to return to its former state and smooths fishers’ harvests and resource rents, and (c), lowers the chance of a catastrophic collapse following a negative shock.

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Citation

Grafton, Q., Kompas, T. & Pham, V.H. (2005). Cod today and none tomorrow: The economic value of a marine reserve. International and Development Economics Paper 05-7. Canberra, ACT: Crawford School of Economics and Government, The Australian National University.

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Land Economics

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