Fishing effort validation and substitution possibilities among components: the case study of the VIII division European anchovy fishery
Fecha
2003Autor
Astorkitza Ikazuriaga, Kepa Andoni
Metadatos
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Applied Economics 35(1) : 63-77 (2003)
Resumen
Command and control regulation programs, particularly input constraints, typically
fail to achieve stated objectives, because fishermen may substitute unregulated for
regulated inputs. It is, thus, essential to have an understanding of the internal structure of
production technology. A primal formulation is used to estimate a translog production
function at the vessels level that includes fishing effort and fisherman’s skill. The flexibility
of the selected functional permits the analysis of the substitution possibilities among inputs
by estimating the elasticity of substitution with no prior constraints. Particular attention is
paid to the empirical validation of fishing effort as an aggregate input, which implies
either, the acceptation of the joint hypothesis that inputs making up effort are weakly
separable from the inputs out of the subgroup or considering that effort is an intermediate
input produced by a non-separable two stage technology. Cross sectional data from the
Spanish purse seine fleet operating in the VIII Division European anchovy fishery provide
evidence of limited input substitution possibilities among the inputs making up the
empirically validated fishing effort translog micro-production function.