Title of article
Leisure/Labor Tradeoffs: The Backward-Bending Labor Supply in Fisheries
Author/Authors
Amy Buss Gautam*، نويسنده , , Ivar Strand†، نويسنده , , James Kirkley‡، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 1996
Pages
16
From page
352
To page
367
Abstract
Economists have understood that the open-access nature of fishing grounds can cause the long-run fishery supply to bend backward. There is also increasing speculation that fishermen respond to falling output price either by increasing or decreasing effort, depending on the circumstances. This suggests a short-run backward-bending supply of fishing labor. A dynamic, utility-theoretic model of fishermenʹs behavior is developed to address this possibility. The model highlights both contemporaneous and intertemporal trade-offs between labor and leisure. The model is tested and the results indicate that the short-run labor supply in fisheries may exhibit backward-bending properties. In addition, changes in current prices may trigger changes in expectations of future prices, causing potentially greater counterintuitive behavior. These results challenge many traditional regulatory strategies (e.g., output taxes) that address problems of open access.
Journal title
Journal of Environmental Economics and Management
Serial Year
1996
Journal title
Journal of Environmental Economics and Management
Record number
703600
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