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Two Broad Economic Measures. Economic ValueMonetizes the value people place on resources. Is society better or worse off as the result of a policy?Economic ImpactsExamines the flow of expenditures through a community.Who wins and who loses as a result of a policy?. Economic Value. . . $. Quanti
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1. Brad Gentner
Economist
Office of Science & Technology
Division of Statistics and Economics
National Marine Fisheries Service Economics 101: Using Economics for Management Decisions Thanks for the opportunity by educating the public, better decisions will get made.
I want to make it clear that I am not here as an advocate of recreational fishing, but as an advocate of good stewardship and the highest and best use of our marine resources. I will present a case study today and want to make it clear that when manage using economic efficiency as a criteria, recreational interests wont always prevail. Whats best for society and the resource will prevail though and that is what is important.Thanks for the opportunity by educating the public, better decisions will get made.
I want to make it clear that I am not here as an advocate of recreational fishing, but as an advocate of good stewardship and the highest and best use of our marine resources. I will present a case study today and want to make it clear that when manage using economic efficiency as a criteria, recreational interests wont always prevail. Whats best for society and the resource will prevail though and that is what is important.
2. Two Broad Economic Measures Economic Value
Monetizes the value people place on resources.
Is society better or worse off as the result of a policy?
Economic Impacts
Examines the flow of expenditures through a community.
Who wins and who loses as a result of a policy? AKA benefits, welfare, value
a value loss = cost, a value gain = benefit.
Or is society a winner or loser overall. This is the relevant question to ask when deciding between two policies (not impacts). Will society be better or worse off due to this policy.
Economic impacts, on the other hand, track how policies impact businesses and households, allowing policy makers to decide between two policies with similar benefits or costs. It determines if one group will be affected more financially than another. Give example
Ideally, policies should be set to maximize benefits or minimize costs. Once the policy is set, policy makers use economic impacts to determine which businesses win or lose.
This will be the first data collection in HI to collect data suitable for analyzing both components of economic importance
AKA benefits, welfare, value
a value loss = cost, a value gain = benefit.
Or is society a winner or loser overall. This is the relevant question to ask when deciding between two policies (not impacts). Will society be better or worse off due to this policy.
Economic impacts, on the other hand, track how policies impact businesses and households, allowing policy makers to decide between two policies with similar benefits or costs. It determines if one group will be affected more financially than another. Give example
Ideally, policies should be set to maximize benefits or minimize costs. Once the policy is set, policy makers use economic impacts to determine which businesses win or lose.
This will be the first data collection in HI to collect data suitable for analyzing both components of economic importance
3. Economic Value Ill quickly try to demonstrate both ideas. Demand curve is a mapping of all combinations of price and quantity for a given good. At a particular Price a consumer buys X number of trips. The shaded area is what you have been willing to pay but did not have to pay; this is value.
For businesses, value = profits, so if it helps you, angler value can be thought of individuals profits; what they get to keep versus what they had to spend to take a fishing trip.
Benefits (bigger triangle) and costs (shrinking triangle). This is a simplistic example because, in the case of recreational fishing, the profits of those businesses the cater to recreational anglers add to this value.
This works great for toothpaste, cereal, anything you can buy in a store. Unfortunately, you cannot buy a trip in a store.
So, what is the price of a recreational trip? Travel cost which includes distance traveled, cost of driving your car, income you gave up on your trip, etc. Number of trips taken is the quantity and we can get all this data from the HMRFSIll quickly try to demonstrate both ideas. Demand curve is a mapping of all combinations of price and quantity for a given good. At a particular Price a consumer buys X number of trips. The shaded area is what you have been willing to pay but did not have to pay; this is value.
For businesses, value = profits, so if it helps you, angler value can be thought of individuals profits; what they get to keep versus what they had to spend to take a fishing trip.
Benefits (bigger triangle) and costs (shrinking triangle). This is a simplistic example because, in the case of recreational fishing, the profits of those businesses the cater to recreational anglers add to this value.
This works great for toothpaste, cereal, anything you can buy in a store. Unfortunately, you cannot buy a trip in a store.
So, what is the price of a recreational trip? Travel cost which includes distance traveled, cost of driving your car, income you gave up on your trip, etc. Number of trips taken is the quantity and we can get all this data from the HMRFS
4. Economic Impacts Economic impacts are an entirely different animal. Again this is about the distribution of changes in benefits across business in the economy. Economic impacts begin with angler purchases. An angler walks into a store and buys $5.00 worth of doughnuts. This would be the price ($) and quantity from the last slide, but instead of trying to figure out what that angler might have spent in addition to that price, like with value, we examine how that $5 moves through the local economy. Initial expenditure (direct), indirect, and induced impacts.
Economic impacts can also be expressed in terms of changes in incomes or employment generated by the purchase.
Economic impacts are an entirely different animal. Again this is about the distribution of changes in benefits across business in the economy. Economic impacts begin with angler purchases. An angler walks into a store and buys $5.00 worth of doughnuts. This would be the price ($) and quantity from the last slide, but instead of trying to figure out what that angler might have spent in addition to that price, like with value, we examine how that $5 moves through the local economy. Initial expenditure (direct), indirect, and induced impacts.
Economic impacts can also be expressed in terms of changes in incomes or employment generated by the purchase.
5. Why Value and Not Impacts? Impacts dont measure efficiency
Highest and best use
Substituting golfing for fishing may generate higher economic impacts, but not higher value
Simply measures transfers between sectors
Impacts dont measure consumer surplus
Net effect in economic impacts is zero
Impossible to tell then which policy is better
Impacts dont measure producer surplus
6. Using Economics for Policy Analysis Laws mandate examination of value
To do this job, we need
Angler demand for trips
Angler expenditures
Angler behavioral response to policies
How do we get that information
Expenditure surveys
Behavior surveys
Catch and effort surveys NEPA, MSRA, EO 12866
Allocation, bag limit, size limit, seasonal closuresNEPA, MSRA, EO 12866
Allocation, bag limit, size limit, seasonal closures
7. Using Economics for Allocation Ideally, the optimum allocation is one that maximizes NET ECONOMIC BENEFITS
Not economic impacts
Not who has the highest value takes all
Recreation side - consumer + producer surplus
Anglers willingness to pay for that next fish
Charter and head boat profits
Commercial side consumer + producer surplus
Consumer willingness to pay for fish at the market
Commercial harvester and processor profits
Rent to labor
Dont forget diminishing marginal returns
8. Equate Marginal Benefits q* is the optimal % for the commercial sector and Q-q* is the recreational share
Assuming small profit maxing firms facing perfectly competitive markets for inputs and outputs therefore marginal benefit horizontal (profit function) illustration also works for diminishing returns or downward sloping MB or profit line, which could be the case under open access. Under an ITQ/DAP system, the MB is the quota trade price.
Recreational MB is downward sloping recognizing diminishing marginal returnsq* is the optimal % for the commercial sector and Q-q* is the recreational share
Assuming small profit maxing firms facing perfectly competitive markets for inputs and outputs therefore marginal benefit horizontal (profit function) illustration also works for diminishing returns or downward sloping MB or profit line, which could be the case under open access. Under an ITQ/DAP system, the MB is the quota trade price.
Recreational MB is downward sloping recognizing diminishing marginal returns
9. So Whats Stopping Us? Lack behavioral surveys for all species
For allocation, there is a lack of data on the commercial side
Very few mandatory data collection programs
Includes for-hire recreational industry
Lack of understanding of the role in economics in the policy process
10. What Can You Do? Continue to support and participate in recreational data collection efforts
This includes the MRFSS
Without it, I cant collect economic data
Encourage better data collection for commercial fisheries
Increase economic literacy
Feel free to send me an email at brad.gentner@noaa.gov with any questions