Misreporting time preferences in the cooperative management of a common fish pool

Many fish stocks have been exhausted or are currently overexploited. Cooperative management of common fish pools may be necessary to sustain stock levels and future harvests. Even when countries have differing time preferences, and thus conflicting management objectives, it has been proven that coop...

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Autor principal: Gråd, Erik
Formato: Second cycle, A2E
Lenguaje:Inglés
Inglés
Publicado: 2016
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://stud.epsilon.slu.se/9667/
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author Gråd, Erik
author_browse Gråd, Erik
author_facet Gråd, Erik
author_sort Gråd, Erik
collection Epsilon Archive for Student Projects
description Many fish stocks have been exhausted or are currently overexploited. Cooperative management of common fish pools may be necessary to sustain stock levels and future harvests. Even when countries have differing time preferences, and thus conflicting management objectives, it has been proven that cooperation can be set up such that it benefits every country involved. This, however, may require higher shares of the harvest for countries with lower discounting factors. A game theoretical approach is used to show that hiding time preferences may be a beneficial strategy for individual players. This is shown, however, to be detrimental for total welfare. The bioeconomic model proposed by Levhari & Mirman (1980), and extended by Breton & Keoula (2014), is used as a frame and optimal management strategies are determined. When cooperating, players are given a weight. These weights are then used to establish harvesting levels, by maximizing the sum of each players weighted utility. Three methods for establishing weights are proposed. This is done in order to capture real life situations. Reporting a lower discount factor is proven to be beneficial under several scenarios depending on actual time preferences, growth potential of the stock considered and how weights are set. A second-best policy is then set up so that a truthful player (the Principal) may induce the other player (the Agent) to report truthfully as well. This comes at a cost for the Principal in terms of information rent. The second-best arrangement is however often preferred over the outcomes associated with i) competition or ii) cooperation with a misreporting Agent. Finally, the case where both players are misreporting is examined. It is shown that both players may have incentives to report lower discount factors. This may potentially lead to a standard “prisoners’ dilemma” situation, where the parties involved would be better off if reporting truthfully.
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spelling RepoSLU96672016-10-10T14:54:08Z https://stud.epsilon.slu.se/9667/ Misreporting time preferences in the cooperative management of a common fish pool Gråd, Erik Development economics and policies Many fish stocks have been exhausted or are currently overexploited. Cooperative management of common fish pools may be necessary to sustain stock levels and future harvests. Even when countries have differing time preferences, and thus conflicting management objectives, it has been proven that cooperation can be set up such that it benefits every country involved. This, however, may require higher shares of the harvest for countries with lower discounting factors. A game theoretical approach is used to show that hiding time preferences may be a beneficial strategy for individual players. This is shown, however, to be detrimental for total welfare. The bioeconomic model proposed by Levhari & Mirman (1980), and extended by Breton & Keoula (2014), is used as a frame and optimal management strategies are determined. When cooperating, players are given a weight. These weights are then used to establish harvesting levels, by maximizing the sum of each players weighted utility. Three methods for establishing weights are proposed. This is done in order to capture real life situations. Reporting a lower discount factor is proven to be beneficial under several scenarios depending on actual time preferences, growth potential of the stock considered and how weights are set. A second-best policy is then set up so that a truthful player (the Principal) may induce the other player (the Agent) to report truthfully as well. This comes at a cost for the Principal in terms of information rent. The second-best arrangement is however often preferred over the outcomes associated with i) competition or ii) cooperation with a misreporting Agent. Finally, the case where both players are misreporting is examined. It is shown that both players may have incentives to report lower discount factors. This may potentially lead to a standard “prisoners’ dilemma” situation, where the parties involved would be better off if reporting truthfully. 2016-09-29 Second cycle, A2E NonPeerReviewed application/pdf en https://stud.epsilon.slu.se/9667/1/grad_e_160926.pdf Gråd, Erik, 2016. Misreporting time preferences in the cooperative management of a common fish pool. Second cycle, A2E. Uppsala: (NL, NJ) > Dept. of Economics <https://stud.epsilon.slu.se/view/divisions/OID-510.html> urn:nbn:se:slu:epsilon-s-5936 eng
spellingShingle Development economics and policies
Gråd, Erik
Misreporting time preferences in the cooperative management of a common fish pool
title Misreporting time preferences in the cooperative management of a common fish pool
title_full Misreporting time preferences in the cooperative management of a common fish pool
title_fullStr Misreporting time preferences in the cooperative management of a common fish pool
title_full_unstemmed Misreporting time preferences in the cooperative management of a common fish pool
title_short Misreporting time preferences in the cooperative management of a common fish pool
title_sort misreporting time preferences in the cooperative management of a common fish pool
topic Development economics and policies
url https://stud.epsilon.slu.se/9667/
https://stud.epsilon.slu.se/9667/