Hostname: page-component-cd9895bd7-gbm5v Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-12-25T19:40:26.206Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

An Econometric Model of the Market for New England Groundfish

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  10 May 2017

Stephen R. Crutchfield*
Affiliation:
Department of Resource Economics, University of Rhode Island, Kingston RI 02881
Get access

Abstract

This paper develops an economic model of the New England groundfish market. A multi-sector, multi-level econometric model is estimated using data from 1970 to 1982. The parameters of the estimated model are used to characterize consumer demand for groundfish and related products. Retail and exvessel demands for fresh and frozen groundfish fillets are found to be highly elastic. Fresh fillets especially show high income elasticity of demand, reflecting their status as a luxury good. Only a very small and statistically weak relationship was found between the prices of imported groundfish and domestic ex vessel prices indicating that proposals to assist the domestic industry via tariffs may be ineffectual.

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © 1985 Northeastern Agricultural and Resource Economics Association 

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Bell, F., 1968. “The Pope and the Price of Fish.” American Economic Review 53:1346–50.Google Scholar
Bockstael, Nancy, 1977. “A Market Model for New England Groundfish.” University of Rhode Island Agricultural Experiment Station Bulletin No. 442.Google Scholar
Bockstael, Nancy, and Opaluch, James, 1983. “Discrete Modelling of Supply Response under Uncertainty: The Case of the Fishery.” Journal of Environmental Economics and Management 10(2)(June 1983):125137.Google Scholar
Capalbo, Susan M., Dirlam, Joel B., Norton, Virgil J., and Wang, D. H., 1977. “3.” Rhode Island Agricultural Experiment Station Contribution No. 1738, Department of Resource Economics, University of Rhode Island, Kingston.Google Scholar
Cole, K., and Dirlam, J. B., 1981. “Remedies available to New England fishermen for protection against subsidized or unfair competition.” Marine Memo 47 NOAA/Sea Grant University of Rhode Island, Kingston.Google Scholar
Copes, Parzival, 1982. “Implementing Canada's marine fisheries policy: Objectives, hazards and constraints.” Marine Policy 6(3):930947.Google Scholar
Corey, R., and Dirlam, J. B., 1982. “Canadian financial assistance to the fishing industry.” Marine Memorandum 73. Sea Grant, University of Rhode Island, Kingston.Google Scholar
Crutchfield, S., 1985a. “Tariffs, Quotas, and U.S. Groundfish Imports: An Applied Welfare Analysis.” Canadian Journal of Agricultural Economics, July 1985.Google Scholar
Crutchfield, S., 1985b. “Coping With Fish Imports: Alternative Policies for U.S.-Canadian Groundfish Trade.” Marine Policy, July 1985.Google Scholar
Crutchfield, S., and Gates, J., 1983. “The Impact of Groundfish Imports on the U.S. Fishing Industry: An Empirical Analysis.” Paper presented at the Canadian Regional Science Association Annual Meeting, Vancouver, BC, June 4, 1983.Google Scholar
Crutchfield, S., and Gates, J., 1984. “The MFCMA and the New England Fishing Industry: A Retrospective Look.” Paper presented at the Center for Ocean Management Studies Workshop “Resource Use and Use Conflicts in the EEZ,” April 17, 1984, Kingston, Rhode Island.Google Scholar
Crutchfield, S., and Gates, J., 1984. “The Impact of Extended Fisheries Jurisdiction on the New England Otter Trawl Fleet.” Marine Resource Economics, in press.Google Scholar
Farrell, J., and Lampe, H. 1965. The New England Fishing Industry: Functional Markets for Finned Food Fish I & II. Agricultural Experiment Station Bulletin No. 379. Kingston: University of Rhode Island.Google Scholar
Gates, J., and Norton, V., 1974. The Benefits of Fisheries Regulation: A Case Study of the New England Yellowtail Flounder Fishery. Marine Technical Report#21. Kingston: University of Rhode Island.Google Scholar
Gooriesingh, K., 1982. Market Power in the New England Fishing Industry: An Analysis of Prices for Groundfish. , Department of Resource Economics, University of Rhode Island.Google Scholar
Hicks, J. R., 1956. A Revision of Demand Theory. Oxford, Clarendon Press.Google Scholar
Hasselback, N. L., Dirlam, J. B., and Gates, J. M., 1981. “Canadian Lobster imports and the New England lobster imports.” Marine Policy 5(1):4051.Google Scholar
Houtsma, J., 1970. The Effects of Imports on U.S. Groundfish Prices. , McGill University.Google Scholar
Just, R., and Hueth, D., 1979. “Multimarket welfare measurement.” American Economic Review 69(5):947957.Google Scholar
Just, R., and Hueth, D., and Schmitz, A., 1982. Applied Welfare Economics and Public Policy. Prentice Hall, Englewood Cliffs NJ.Google Scholar
Kirby, Michael J. L. (Chairman), 1982. Navigating Troubled Waters: A New Policy for the Atlantic Fisheries. Report of the Task Force on Atlantic Fisheries.Google Scholar
New England Fishery Management Council, 1981. Interim Fishery Management Plan for Atlantic Groundfish.Google Scholar
New England Fishery Management Council, 1984. Northeast Region Multi-Species Fishery Management Plan.Google Scholar
Newton, Christopher, 1972. “The Effect of Tariff Reduction on the Production of Fish Sticks and Portions in the United States.” Unpublished Ph.D. dissertation, University of Rhode Island.Google Scholar
Pestieau, Caroline, 1976. Subsidies and Countervailing Duties: The Negotiating Issues. Sponsored by the Canadian Economic Policy Committee, D. D. Howe Research Institute, Montreal PQ, Canada.Google Scholar
Phlips, Louis, 1974. Applied Consumption Analysis. New York: American Elsevier Publishing Co.Google Scholar
Theil, Henri, 1971. Principles of Econometrics. New York, John Wiley and Sons.Google Scholar
Tsoa, E., Schrank, W., and Roy, N., 1982. “U.S. Demand for Selected Groundfish Products, 1967–1980.” American Journal of Agricultural Economics, August 1982. 484497.Google Scholar
U.S. Department of Commerce, National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, National Marine Fisheries Service. Fisheries of the United States. Various Years.Google Scholar
U.S. Department of Commerce, National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, National Marine Fisheries Service, Food Fish Market Review and Outlook. Various Years.Google Scholar
U.S. International Trade Commission, 1984. “Conditions of Competition Affecting the Northeastern U.S. Groundfish and Scallop Industries in Selected Markets.” USITC Publication 1622. Washington, D.C.Google Scholar
Wang, D-H., 1982. “A Report: Research Service to Work on the NMFS Financial and Market Information System.” University of Minnesota—Norris, September 1982.Google Scholar
Waugh, F., and Miller, M., 1969. Fish Cycles: A Harmonic Analysis. Bureau of Commercial Fisheries, U.S. Department of the Interior. Washington, D.C., U.S. Government Printing Office.Google Scholar
Waugh, F., and Miller, M., and Norton, V. 1969. Some Analyses of Fish Prices. Agricultural Experiment Station Bulletin. Kingston: University of Rhode Island.Google Scholar