Economic concept of community-based management for coastal fisheries

Open-access fishery has led to problems of overfishing and dissipation of resource rent. Among fishery biologist maximum sustainable yields are preferred. To economists, the optimal level of fishing is at maximum economic yield where resource rent and consumer surplus are maximized. Nevertheless, conventional management schemes by central authority are inefficient among tropic coastal state countries with multi-species, multi-gear fisheries, Community-based fisheries management (CBFM) is then in an option for a a better cost effective management schemes Resource rent can be maximized while resources will be more abundant but at the cost of decreasing consumer surplus. There is a plausible under fishing in adopting CBFM, Supportive institutional framework, strong local organization, exclusivity of fishing against outsiders, sedentary/inshore fisheries, and recognition on fisherman social status are positive factors advocating the adoption of CBFM while the negative factors are the opposite, plus heterogeneity of fishermen and problems of equity in access to fishing. Economics of CBFM is actually the distribution of control power due to market failure. There are external elements given to the local fishermen who can only control their internal decisions. The optimum is obtained where marginal benefit of CBFM equals marginal cost. Factors to be considered are transaction costs, including exclusivity and governance costs. In adopting CBFM maximizing resource rent must be combined with minimizing transaction costs for an optimum fishing level.

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Tokrisna, Ruangrai
Format: book_section biblioteca
Language:English
Published: Training Department, Southeast Asian Fisheries Development Center 1997
Subjects:Fisheries, Coastal fisheries, Fishery management, Fishery economics,
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1834/40857
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spelling dig-aquadocs-1834-408572021-07-24T02:55:06Z Economic concept of community-based management for coastal fisheries Proceedings of the Regional Workshop on Coastal Fisheries Management Based on Southeast Asian Experiences, Chiang Mai, Thailand, 19-22 November 1996 Tokrisna, Ruangrai Fisheries Coastal fisheries Fishery management Fishery economics Open-access fishery has led to problems of overfishing and dissipation of resource rent. Among fishery biologist maximum sustainable yields are preferred. To economists, the optimal level of fishing is at maximum economic yield where resource rent and consumer surplus are maximized. Nevertheless, conventional management schemes by central authority are inefficient among tropic coastal state countries with multi-species, multi-gear fisheries, Community-based fisheries management (CBFM) is then in an option for a a better cost effective management schemes Resource rent can be maximized while resources will be more abundant but at the cost of decreasing consumer surplus. There is a plausible under fishing in adopting CBFM, Supportive institutional framework, strong local organization, exclusivity of fishing against outsiders, sedentary/inshore fisheries, and recognition on fisherman social status are positive factors advocating the adoption of CBFM while the negative factors are the opposite, plus heterogeneity of fishermen and problems of equity in access to fishing. Economics of CBFM is actually the distribution of control power due to market failure. There are external elements given to the local fishermen who can only control their internal decisions. The optimum is obtained where marginal benefit of CBFM equals marginal cost. Factors to be considered are transaction costs, including exclusivity and governance costs. In adopting CBFM maximizing resource rent must be combined with minimizing transaction costs for an optimum fishing level. 2021-06-24T18:39:54Z 2021-06-24T18:39:54Z 1997 book_section http://hdl.handle.net/1834/40857 en http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12067/947 application/pdf application/pdf 169-175 7 Training Department, Southeast Asian Fisheries Development Center Samut Prakan, Thailand http://aquaticcommons.org/id/eprint/26658 23782 2019-07-29 07:12:36 26658 Southeast Asian Fisheries Development Center, Training Department
institution UNESCO
collection DSpace
country Francia
countrycode FR
component Bibliográfico
access En linea
databasecode dig-aquadocs
tag biblioteca
region Europa del Oeste
libraryname Repositorio AQUADOCS
language English
topic Fisheries
Coastal fisheries
Fishery management
Fishery economics
Fisheries
Coastal fisheries
Fishery management
Fishery economics
spellingShingle Fisheries
Coastal fisheries
Fishery management
Fishery economics
Fisheries
Coastal fisheries
Fishery management
Fishery economics
Tokrisna, Ruangrai
Economic concept of community-based management for coastal fisheries
description Open-access fishery has led to problems of overfishing and dissipation of resource rent. Among fishery biologist maximum sustainable yields are preferred. To economists, the optimal level of fishing is at maximum economic yield where resource rent and consumer surplus are maximized. Nevertheless, conventional management schemes by central authority are inefficient among tropic coastal state countries with multi-species, multi-gear fisheries, Community-based fisheries management (CBFM) is then in an option for a a better cost effective management schemes Resource rent can be maximized while resources will be more abundant but at the cost of decreasing consumer surplus. There is a plausible under fishing in adopting CBFM, Supportive institutional framework, strong local organization, exclusivity of fishing against outsiders, sedentary/inshore fisheries, and recognition on fisherman social status are positive factors advocating the adoption of CBFM while the negative factors are the opposite, plus heterogeneity of fishermen and problems of equity in access to fishing. Economics of CBFM is actually the distribution of control power due to market failure. There are external elements given to the local fishermen who can only control their internal decisions. The optimum is obtained where marginal benefit of CBFM equals marginal cost. Factors to be considered are transaction costs, including exclusivity and governance costs. In adopting CBFM maximizing resource rent must be combined with minimizing transaction costs for an optimum fishing level.
format book_section
topic_facet Fisheries
Coastal fisheries
Fishery management
Fishery economics
author Tokrisna, Ruangrai
author_facet Tokrisna, Ruangrai
author_sort Tokrisna, Ruangrai
title Economic concept of community-based management for coastal fisheries
title_short Economic concept of community-based management for coastal fisheries
title_full Economic concept of community-based management for coastal fisheries
title_fullStr Economic concept of community-based management for coastal fisheries
title_full_unstemmed Economic concept of community-based management for coastal fisheries
title_sort economic concept of community-based management for coastal fisheries
publisher Training Department, Southeast Asian Fisheries Development Center
publishDate 1997
url http://hdl.handle.net/1834/40857
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AT tokrisnaruangrai proceedingsoftheregionalworkshoponcoastalfisheriesmanagementbasedonsoutheastasianexperienceschiangmaithailand1922november1996
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