Stakeholder Influence and Optimal Regulations: A Common-Agency Analysis of Ecosystem-Based Fisheries Regulations
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https://hdl.handle.net/10037/5964View/ Open
This is the accepted manuscript version. Published version available at http://dx.doi.org/10.1628/093245613X13620416111245 (PDF)
Date
2013Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed
Abstract
One aspect of ecosystem-based management is to include new stakeholders. When an environmental NGO (ENGO) gets a say in the fisheries management, this will affect the authorities' optimal regulation. Combining a principal-agent model and a steady-state bioeconomic model, we show that under symmetric information the authorities will moderate their use of regulation as a response to the ENGO's increased influence. However, the aggregate of the authorities' and the ENGO's regulations will be stronger. On introducing asymmetric information, the regulation of the high-cost fishers relative to the low-cost fishers is weaker than under a single principal.
Publisher
Mohr SiebeckCitation
Journal of Institutional and Theoretical Economics 169(2013) nr. 2 s. 320-338Metadata
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