Conference 2015 New management issues within the reformed Common Fisheries Policy


New management issues within the reformed Common Fisheries Policy: implementation and socio-economic impacts 28th – 30th April 2015, University of Salerno, Italy



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New management issues within the reformed Common Fisheries Policy:
implementation and socio-economic impacts

28th – 30th April 2015, University of Salerno, Italy




An Application of Life-Cycle Theory to the West of Scotland Cod Fishery

P.E. Rodgers

College of Social Science

University of Lincoln

Brayford Pool

Lincoln LN6 7TS

United Kingdom

phil@erinecon.com



prodgers@lincoln.ac.uk

ABSTRACT

This paper applies a life-cycle approach to the West of Scotland fishery for atlantic cod. It acknowledges the fish stock as a harvestable resource regardless of growth levels and drops the assumption usually accepted in fishery models that a long-run non-zero bioeconomic equilibrium will develop where the catch and growth will be equal. Instead, successive short-run economic equilibria develop at the cost of long-run equilibrium. The impact of this is to treat the growth and output as corrections to the volume of the fish stock reserve. A second consequence is that the control variable representing the presence of the fish stock in the production function can be re-defined to accommodate it. The model simulates the rise and fall of the fishery from 1950 to 2011 and calculates the coefficients of a production function.


Keywords: Life-Cycle, Gordon-Schaefer, Production Function
JEL Classification: Q22

An Application of Life-Cycle Theory to the West of Scotland Cod Fishery

I have long thought that the paucity of economic data on fisheries was a serious impediment to the development of economic models of fisheries. This paper rather disproves this assertion while at the same time highlighting the gains that could be made in improved specification of the basic economic model of fisheries if data for the time series in the functions were available.
This view is illustrated by applying a life-cycle approach to the West of Scotland fishery for atlantic cod which is achieved by dropping the assumption usually accepted in fishery models that a long-run non-zero bioeconomic equilibrium will develop where the catch and growth will be equal (Gordon 1954, Schaefer, 1954).
Instead, it is assumed only that successive short-run economic equilibria develop and this proves to be at the cost of long-run equilibrium. The Gordon-Schaefer model only reaches bionomic equilibrium because it assumes in the first place that it will be achieved.
By dropping this assumption we can observe that the fish stock resource would be harvestable just like a mineral reserve even if it were unable to grow or reproduce. This means that growth may be treated as a correction to the size of the fish stock reserve rather like new reserves of a mineral being found but the implication is that there is no reason for a fishery under open access to come to a biological equilibrium where there is economic activity.
A second consequence is that the control variable representing the presence of the fish stock in the production function can be re-defined to accommodate this. The model simulates the rise and fall of the fishery from 1950 to 2011 and calculates the coefficients of a production function.
Consider the standard Gordon model of fisheries. In open access economic equilibrium will be achieved at zero profit, , in each time period such that

where represents the price achieved in time period t and is exogenously given by the availability of fish elsewhere. represents the short-run equilibrium volume of output and represents the total cost of output.
Since
where represents capital, the lone variable input in the model, if we assume, then the constant , the unit cost of capital, may be calculated as

From (3), the capital used may be determined for each time period from a re-arrangement of (1) with (2) substituted



By assigning a value of unity to the volume of the fish stock used in the base year, a value for the constant term, α0, may be determined in a short-run Cobb-Douglas production function

where is an index of the amount of the fish stock reserve used in production (Cobb and Douglas 1928).
The question then arises as to how much of the output in each period is contributed by growth of the fish stock reserve (which does not therefore deplete it) and how much the reserve is depleted.
The short-run economic equilibrium persists throughout the life cycle but the levels of revenue product and use of the non-fish stock factors of production vary with the declining volume of the fish stock.
may be determined by re-arranging (5) and multiplying it by the production function constant, γ, to raise it from an index to absolute values

Since represents the part of output drawn from the reserve fish stock, , the reserve fish stock may then be back-calculated by summing the.

However, in the absence of values for the production function coefficients and the model remains unidentified. This difficulty may be overcome by using ICES1 fish stock assessments, but of course application of the model is then limited only to those fisheries which are subject to ICES attention.
European Union management of the fishery has followed the usual CFP2 rules of a quota system (which may or may not have involved tradeable rights). There were also technical measures relating to gears, minimum landing sizes and so on but management failed and the fishery is now subject to a moratorium. Figure 1 shows the progress of the fishery from 1950 to 2011.

ICES fish stock assessments for West of Scotland cod commenced only in 1983 (ICES 2015) so the values of the coefficients, α1 and α2, were estimated over the period 1983 to 2011 by minimizing the sum of squared differences between the model estimates of the fish stock reserve and the ICES estimates. The estimate for α1 was 0.9138 with α2 acquiring a value of 0.6713 – both reflecting diminishing returns to scale. α0 adopted the value of the 1950 volume of landings, 5,144 and was the value of output in 1950, €5.062m.



Figure 1: The Life-cycle in Open-Access of the West of Scotland Cod Fishery

The present value of the contribution to social welfare from West of Scotland cod over the period 1963 to 2011 discounted at an annual rate of 5% is estimated to have been some €7,711m at 2011 prices. This was determined as the sum of the short-run producer surpluses, the area between the perfectly elastic demand curve (which offered no contribution from consumer surplus) and the supply curve.
The graph in Figure 1 illustrates results from the model that imply that the fish stock was already in sharp decline in 1950. We appear to be observing the tail-end of the life cycle.
The ICES fish stock assessment is also shown in Figure 1. The correlation coefficient between the model’s fish stock reserve estimate and the ICES assessment is 0.9742 over the period 1983-2011, with a mean percentage difference of 6.01% and a percentage standard deviation of 27.62%.
References
Cobb C.W. and P.H. Douglas (1928) A Theory of Production, American Economic Review, Papers and Proceedings, Vol 18 Supplement, 139-165.
Gordon H.S. (1954) The economic theory of a common property resource: the fishery, Journal of Political Economy, 62, 124-42.
ICES (2015) http://www.ices.dk/marine-data/dataset-collections/Pages/Fish-catch-and-stock-assessment.aspx, viewed 3rd March.
Schaefer M.B. (1954) Some aspects of the dynamics of population important to the management of commercial marine fisheries, Inter-American Tropical Tuna Commission Bulletin, 2, 247-85.
Appendix: Results of the Model of the West of Scotland Cod Fishery, 1950 to 2011


Year

q

TR

k

Brelative

dB

B

Real Price (2011=1)

ICES Stock Assessment

SW

1950

5,144

5

1.000

1.000

5,144

221,249

984

 

106.882

1951

5,826

5

0.959

1.440

7,406

216,105

833

 

97.511

1952

8,628

9

1.700

1.224

6,298

208,699

997

 

164.423

1953

12,417

12

2.332

1.572

8,085

202,400

951

 

214.543

1954

15,024

15

3.056

1.473

7,578

194,316

1,030

 

267.428

1955

15,516

15

3.002

1.640

8,436

186,737

979

 

249.913

1956

15,680

15

3.019

1.663

8,555

178,301

975

 

239.036

1957

18,059

20

4.005

1.360

6,995

169,746

1,123

 

301.670

1958

17,001

20

3.863

1.266

6,512

162,751

1,150

 

276.765

1959

13,959

16

3.207

1.137

5,849

156,239

1,163

 

218.560

1960

11,668

15

2.878

0.920

4,734

150,391

1,249

 

186.598

1961

10,378

13

2.521

0.899

4,626

145,657

1,230

 

155.477

1962

9,764

10

2.020

1.180

6,072

141,031

1,047

 

118.513

1963

13,746

16

3.153

1.132

5,826

134,959

1,161

 

175.946

1964

23,164

30

5.878

1.181

6,074

129,134

1,284

 

311.975

1965

23,033

29

5.765

1.208

6,216

123,059

1,267

 

291.069

1966

17,133

20

4.022

1.195

6,148

116,843

1,188

 

193.178

1967

23,025

25

4.945

1.607

8,265

110,696

1,087

 

225.908

1968

24,357

24

4.725

1.991

10,242

102,431

982

 

205.309

1969

21,739

22

4.315

1.814

9,332

92,189

1,005

 

178.371

1970

12,682

15

3.034

1.011

5,201

82,856

1,211

 

119.281

1971

10,666

16

3.226

0.605

3,114

77,656

1,531

 

120.649

1972

14,699

28

5.558

0.460

2,365

74,542

1,914

 

197.749

1973

12,263

29

5.798

0.280

1,440

72,177

2,393

 

196.233

1974

13,652

27

5.327

0.420

2,159

70,736

1,975

 

171.504

1975

13,163

23

4.510

0.526

2,707

68,577

1,734

 

138.117

1976

17,405

37

7.392

0.399

2,053

65,870

2,150

 

215.310

1977

12,619

34

6.634

0.233

1,197

63,818

2,661

 

183.812

1978

13,521

34

6.727

0.266

1,368

62,620

2,518

 

177.301

1979

16,242

39

7.779

0.309

1,592

61,253

2,424

 

195.028

1980

17,870

35

6.981

0.472

2,426

59,661

1,977

 

166.478

1981

23,950

40

7.887

0.738

3,794

57,235

1,667

59,001

178.917

1982

21,965

40

7.929

0.598

3,078

53,441

1,827

58,258

171.098

1983

21,491

38

7.606

0.615

3,163

50,363

1,791

49,549

156.116

1984

20,552

39

7.720

0.540

2,775

47,200

1,901

53,107

150.744

1985

18,614

33

6.591

0.577

2,966

44,425

1,792

36,318

122.424

1986

11,526

25

4.954

0.325

1,674

41,459

2,176

34,433

87.533

1987

19,199

41

8.071

0.425

2,184

39,785

2,128

43,552

135.640

1988

19,182

41

8.037

0.427

2,197

37,601

2,121

42,508

128.486

1989

15,425

32

6.345

0.402

2,065

35,404

2,082

36,667

96.486

1990

11,777

24

4.664

0.383

1,968

33,339

2,005

26,936

67.470

1991

10,628

25

5.037

0.262

1,346

31,371

2,399

23,652

69.312

1992

9,022

21

4.074

0.267

1,371

30,024

2,286

23,542

53.317

1993

10,475

21

4.054

0.379

1,952

28,653

1,959

28,067

50.469

1994

9,131

17

3.412

0.381

1,961

26,701

1,892

26,570

40.408

1995

9,660

13

2.661

0.690

3,547

24,741

1,394

27,118

29.977

1996

9,580

14

2.685

0.665

3,423

21,194

1,418

24,049

28.768

1997

6,992

10

1.964

0.577

2,968

17,771

1,422

24,507

20.017

1998

5,671

9

1.766

0.434

2,232

14,803

1,577

17,234

17.127

1999

3,447

7

1.297

0.245

1,262

12,571

1,904

14,082

11.958

2000

3,064

6

1.144

0.236

1,213

11,310

1,891

14,853

10.041

2001

2,440

4

0.870

0.233

1,197

10,096

1,805

12,366

7.261

2002

2,231

4

0.801

0.221

1,137

8,899

1,817

11,461

6.356

2003

1,298

2

0.479

0.165

850

7,763

1,868

7,625

3.617

2004

596

1

0.222

0.115

594

6,912

1,885

4,641

1.594

2005

421

1

0.162

0.094

482

6,319

1,942

3,434

1.104

2006

491

1

0.186

0.102

527

5,837

1,920

3,662

1.210

2007

487

1

0.182

0.105

542

5,310

1,888

4,141

1.123

2008

445

1

0.167

0.101

517

4,768

1,895

3,621

0.980

2009

234

0

0.072

0.109

562

4,251

1,556

3,518

0.402

2010

249

0

0.091

0.082

420

3,689

1,847

4,228

0.484

2011

205

0

0.081

0.065

334

3,269

1,996

3,801

0.409



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