Biotechnology and genetic resource policies: What is a genebank worth?: December 2003, Briefs 7

It’s Not as Easy as 1, 2, 3… How much is a collection of plant genetic resources worth? Why do economists hesitate to place a value on it? Plant genetic resources generate economic value with multiple dimensions that are difficult to conceptualize. Only a few of these dimensions can be measured and...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Smale, Melinda, Koo, B.
Format: Artículo preliminar
Language:Inglés
Published: 2003
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/104282
_version_ 1855528252968271872
author Smale, Melinda
Koo, B.
author_browse Koo, B.
Smale, Melinda
author_facet Smale, Melinda
Koo, B.
author_sort Smale, Melinda
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description It’s Not as Easy as 1, 2, 3… How much is a collection of plant genetic resources worth? Why do economists hesitate to place a value on it? Plant genetic resources generate economic value with multiple dimensions that are difficult to conceptualize. Only a few of these dimensions can be measured and related to a market price that is a basis for valuation. Scientific nuances complicate measurement. For example, the definition of the genetic unit to be valued depends on the crop and the farming-system context, and whether the units can be added together depends on how closely they resemble one another. Economics research, rather than accounting, is necessary to estimate the costs and benefits of the resources maintained in genebanks. Most genebanks have been publicly financed, and in the past there has been little demand by those who fund them to conduct economics research. Recently, however, demand for assessing the value of such collections appears to have heightened with changing intellectual property regimes and emerging biotechnology applications. List of Briefs: 7. Introduction: A Taxonomy of Genebank Value / Melinda Smale and Bonwoo Koo; 8. Search Strategies and the Value of a Large Collection / Douglas Gollin, Melinda Smale, and Bent Skovmand; 9.The Marginal Value of an Accession / by Armineh Zohrabian, Greg Traxler, Steve Caudill, and Melinda Smale; 10. Strategies for Timely Evaluation of Genebank Accessions / by Bonwoo Koo and Brian D. Wright; 11. The Demand for Crop Genetic Resources from a National Collection / Kelly Day-Rubenstein and Melinda Smale; 12. The Demand for Crop Genetic Resources from International Collections / Cary Fowler, Melinda Smale, and Samy Gaiji.
format Artículo preliminar
id CGSpace104282
institution CGIAR Consortium
language Inglés
publishDate 2003
publishDateRange 2003
publishDateSort 2003
record_format dspace
spelling CGSpace1042822025-11-05T08:02:07Z Biotechnology and genetic resource policies: What is a genebank worth?: December 2003, Briefs 7 Smale, Melinda Koo, B. It’s Not as Easy as 1, 2, 3… How much is a collection of plant genetic resources worth? Why do economists hesitate to place a value on it? Plant genetic resources generate economic value with multiple dimensions that are difficult to conceptualize. Only a few of these dimensions can be measured and related to a market price that is a basis for valuation. Scientific nuances complicate measurement. For example, the definition of the genetic unit to be valued depends on the crop and the farming-system context, and whether the units can be added together depends on how closely they resemble one another. Economics research, rather than accounting, is necessary to estimate the costs and benefits of the resources maintained in genebanks. Most genebanks have been publicly financed, and in the past there has been little demand by those who fund them to conduct economics research. Recently, however, demand for assessing the value of such collections appears to have heightened with changing intellectual property regimes and emerging biotechnology applications. List of Briefs: 7. Introduction: A Taxonomy of Genebank Value / Melinda Smale and Bonwoo Koo; 8. Search Strategies and the Value of a Large Collection / Douglas Gollin, Melinda Smale, and Bent Skovmand; 9.The Marginal Value of an Accession / by Armineh Zohrabian, Greg Traxler, Steve Caudill, and Melinda Smale; 10. Strategies for Timely Evaluation of Genebank Accessions / by Bonwoo Koo and Brian D. Wright; 11. The Demand for Crop Genetic Resources from a National Collection / Kelly Day-Rubenstein and Melinda Smale; 12. The Demand for Crop Genetic Resources from International Collections / Cary Fowler, Melinda Smale, and Samy Gaiji. 2003 2019-10-15T15:40:34Z 2019-10-15T15:40:34Z Working Paper https://hdl.handle.net/10568/104282 en Open Access application/pdf Smale, M.; Koo, B. (Eds.) 2003. Biotechnology and genetic resource policies: What is a genebank worth? n. 24 p. https://doi.org/10.2499/ifpriragbriefs07-12
spellingShingle Smale, Melinda
Koo, B.
Biotechnology and genetic resource policies: What is a genebank worth?: December 2003, Briefs 7
title Biotechnology and genetic resource policies: What is a genebank worth?: December 2003, Briefs 7
title_full Biotechnology and genetic resource policies: What is a genebank worth?: December 2003, Briefs 7
title_fullStr Biotechnology and genetic resource policies: What is a genebank worth?: December 2003, Briefs 7
title_full_unstemmed Biotechnology and genetic resource policies: What is a genebank worth?: December 2003, Briefs 7
title_short Biotechnology and genetic resource policies: What is a genebank worth?: December 2003, Briefs 7
title_sort biotechnology and genetic resource policies what is a genebank worth december 2003 briefs 7
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/104282
work_keys_str_mv AT smalemelinda biotechnologyandgeneticresourcepolicieswhatisagenebankworthdecember2003briefs7
AT koob biotechnologyandgeneticresourcepolicieswhatisagenebankworthdecember2003briefs7