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1 December 2013 Catch, Stock Elasticity, and an Implicit Index of Fishing Effort
NILS-ARNE EKERHOVD
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Abstract

Economists are interested in the relationship between fishing effort and stock size and their impact on catch levels. The interest lies in stock elasticity, where it is thought that for pelagic fish species it is close to zero; for demersal fish stocks, closer to one. We statistically model and estimate the relationship between stock size and catch for two species, Northeast Arctic cod and saithe. In doing so we are able to recover estimates of stock elasticity but also estimates of catchability coefficients for different age classes and importantly an implicit index of fishing effort. Data on observed catch and a measure of biomass-at-age are available from the International Council for the Exploration of the Sea. The generated stock data are econometrically problematic, and we use an IV estimator with bootstrapping in estimation. Time-series techniques applied to panel data are used to statistically motivate the estimation, which is carried out within a two-way panel framework.

JEL Codes: C72, Q22

NILS-ARNE EKERHOVD "Catch, Stock Elasticity, and an Implicit Index of Fishing Effort," Marine Resource Economics 28(4), 379-395, (1 December 2013). https://doi.org/10.5950/0738-1360-28.4.379
Published: 1 December 2013
JOURNAL ARTICLE
17 PAGES

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KEYWORDS
age class
catchability coefficients
Fishing effort
Stock elasticity
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