The Political Game of European Fisheries Management
Permanent link
https://hdl.handle.net/10037/8929Date
2015-02-14Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed
Abstract
European fisheries activities are subject to a hierarchy of regulatory authorities.
This raises questions regarding the implications of strategic interaction between different
authority levels concerning the regulation of these activities. We apply a bio-economic
objective function where fishers and regulators have environmental, economic and social
preferences, and where fishers are subject to the aggregate of the regulations set by the various
authorities. We analyse one situation where EU authorities set their regulation first,
followed by national authorities’ regulation, and one situation where the two regulators set
their regulations simultaneously. Using data from a survey on preferences among fisheries
stakeholders combined with data from the UK nephrops fisheries, this study shows that a
hierarchy of regulators with similar preferences will yield higher unit regulations, i.e. higher
taxes or higher subsidies than a situation with one regulating authority. When regulators
have unequal preferences we may get a situation where one regulator induces a tax on effort,
whereas the other offers a subsidy. In this situation the aggregate unit regulation becomes
uncertain.
Description
Accepted manuscript version. The final publication is available at Springer via http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s10640-015-9878-0