Estimating Heterogeneous Primal Capacity and Capacity Utilization Measures in a Multi-Species Fishery

Efficient management of natural resources hinges on our ability to monitor and assess the status of the resource stocks as well as the actions and economic performance of the agents utilizing such resources. The sustainability and viability (both in physical and economic terms) of our resource manag...

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Main Authors: Schnier, Kurt, Felthoven, Ronald
Format: Report
Language:English
unknown
Published: International Institute of Fisheries Economics and Trade
Subjects:
Online Access:https://ir.library.oregonstate.edu/concern/conference_proceedings_or_journals/2801ph44c
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spelling ftoregonstate:ir.library.oregonstate.edu:2801ph44c 2024-04-14T08:09:51+00:00 Estimating Heterogeneous Primal Capacity and Capacity Utilization Measures in a Multi-Species Fishery Schnier, Kurt Felthoven, Ronald https://ir.library.oregonstate.edu/concern/conference_proceedings_or_journals/2801ph44c English [eng] eng unknown International Institute of Fisheries Economics and Trade https://ir.library.oregonstate.edu/concern/conference_proceedings_or_journals/2801ph44c Copyright Not Evaluated Fisheries -- Economic aspects -- Congresses Sustainable fisheries -- Congresses Research Paper ftoregonstate 2024-03-21T15:52:45Z Efficient management of natural resources hinges on our ability to monitor and assess the status of the resource stocks as well as the actions and economic performance of the agents utilizing such resources. The sustainability and viability (both in physical and economic terms) of our resource management plans can in part be assessed by estimating the extractive or productive capacity of economic agents relying on a given resource. However, because of the limitations and uncertainty associated with the available data, particularly in the fishing industry, estimating the capacity and capacity utilization of the agents using the resource can be a difficult endeavor. Compounding the difficulties of estimating capacity is the heterogeneous nature of the agents using the resource. Heterogeneity in the agents implies that multiple production processes may exist, which must be accounted for when attempting to measure capacity and capacity utilization. This research addresses this concern by estimating heterogeneous capacity and capacity utilization, using latent class regression analysis, in the context of a multi-species fishery and it illustrates the complexities that arise in the presence of heterogeneous production technologies - a common situation in multi-species, multi-gear fisheries. Our results indicate that there exists substantial heterogeneity in the production technologies possessed by fisherman within the Eastern Bering Sea flatfish fishery. This in turn translates to differences in the capacity estimates generated using the heterogeneous production frontier model when compared to the traditional homogeneous model. Given the superior empirical fit of the heterogeneous production frontier, this indicates that traditional homogeneous production frontier will overestimate production capacity when heterogeneity in production technologies exists. Report Bering Sea ScholarsArchive@OSU (Oregon State University) Bering Sea
institution Open Polar
collection ScholarsArchive@OSU (Oregon State University)
op_collection_id ftoregonstate
language English
unknown
topic Fisheries -- Economic aspects -- Congresses
Sustainable fisheries -- Congresses
spellingShingle Fisheries -- Economic aspects -- Congresses
Sustainable fisheries -- Congresses
Schnier, Kurt
Felthoven, Ronald
Estimating Heterogeneous Primal Capacity and Capacity Utilization Measures in a Multi-Species Fishery
topic_facet Fisheries -- Economic aspects -- Congresses
Sustainable fisheries -- Congresses
description Efficient management of natural resources hinges on our ability to monitor and assess the status of the resource stocks as well as the actions and economic performance of the agents utilizing such resources. The sustainability and viability (both in physical and economic terms) of our resource management plans can in part be assessed by estimating the extractive or productive capacity of economic agents relying on a given resource. However, because of the limitations and uncertainty associated with the available data, particularly in the fishing industry, estimating the capacity and capacity utilization of the agents using the resource can be a difficult endeavor. Compounding the difficulties of estimating capacity is the heterogeneous nature of the agents using the resource. Heterogeneity in the agents implies that multiple production processes may exist, which must be accounted for when attempting to measure capacity and capacity utilization. This research addresses this concern by estimating heterogeneous capacity and capacity utilization, using latent class regression analysis, in the context of a multi-species fishery and it illustrates the complexities that arise in the presence of heterogeneous production technologies - a common situation in multi-species, multi-gear fisheries. Our results indicate that there exists substantial heterogeneity in the production technologies possessed by fisherman within the Eastern Bering Sea flatfish fishery. This in turn translates to differences in the capacity estimates generated using the heterogeneous production frontier model when compared to the traditional homogeneous model. Given the superior empirical fit of the heterogeneous production frontier, this indicates that traditional homogeneous production frontier will overestimate production capacity when heterogeneity in production technologies exists.
format Report
author Schnier, Kurt
Felthoven, Ronald
author_facet Schnier, Kurt
Felthoven, Ronald
author_sort Schnier, Kurt
title Estimating Heterogeneous Primal Capacity and Capacity Utilization Measures in a Multi-Species Fishery
title_short Estimating Heterogeneous Primal Capacity and Capacity Utilization Measures in a Multi-Species Fishery
title_full Estimating Heterogeneous Primal Capacity and Capacity Utilization Measures in a Multi-Species Fishery
title_fullStr Estimating Heterogeneous Primal Capacity and Capacity Utilization Measures in a Multi-Species Fishery
title_full_unstemmed Estimating Heterogeneous Primal Capacity and Capacity Utilization Measures in a Multi-Species Fishery
title_sort estimating heterogeneous primal capacity and capacity utilization measures in a multi-species fishery
publisher International Institute of Fisheries Economics and Trade
url https://ir.library.oregonstate.edu/concern/conference_proceedings_or_journals/2801ph44c
geographic Bering Sea
geographic_facet Bering Sea
genre Bering Sea
genre_facet Bering Sea
op_relation https://ir.library.oregonstate.edu/concern/conference_proceedings_or_journals/2801ph44c
op_rights Copyright Not Evaluated
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