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1 March 2013 Sharing a Migrating Fish Stock
RÖGNVALDUR HANNESSON
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Abstract

The sharing of a migrating fish stock between two players is considered. Data on the Northeast Atlantic mackerel are used to model the fishery. A growth function is estimated, and random fluctuations in growth and recruitment are used to simulate the fishery. Three different migration models are considered: i) deterministic, ii) stock-dependent, and iii) purely random. With deterministic migrations, the minor player has a disproportionate bargaining strength and must be offered a relatively large share of a cooperative solution. The minor player's bargaining strength is weak if the migrations into his economic zone are stock-dependent, but strong if they are purely random. The risk of extinction is shown to be high without stock-dependent unit cost of fish, and to get a viable Nash-Cournot equilibrium the major player's share must be well above one half.

JEL Classification Codes: Q22, Q28, C72

RÖGNVALDUR HANNESSON "Sharing a Migrating Fish Stock," Marine Resource Economics 28(1), 1-17, (1 March 2013). https://doi.org/10.5950/0738-1360-28.1.1
Published: 1 March 2013
JOURNAL ARTICLE
17 PAGES

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KEYWORDS
Atlantic mackerel
climate change
fish migrations
Fisheries economics
Nash-Cournot equilibrium
non-cooperative games
shared fish stocks
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