Restricted Access vs. Open Access Methods of Management: Toward More Effective Regulation of Fishing Effort
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Author
Waters, James R.Date
1991
Metadata
Show full item recordAbstract
This paper gives an overview of the economic rationale for limited entry as a method of fishery management and discusses general advantages and disadvantages of license limitation and catch rights as the two primary methods of restricting access to marine fisheries. Traditional open-access methods of regulation (e.g., gear restrictions, size limits, trip limits, quotas, and closures) can be temporarily effective in protecting fish populations, but they generally fail to provide lasting biological or economic benefits to fishermen because they do not restrict access to the fishery. The general result of regulation with unrestricted access to a fishery is additional and more costly and complex regulations as competition increases for dwindling fishery resources. Regulation that restricts access to a fishery in conjunction with selected traditional methods of regulation would encourage efficient resource usage and minimize the need for future regulatory adjustments, provided that enforcement and monitoring costs are not too great. In theory, catch rights are superior to license limitation as a means of restricting access to a fishery.Journal
Marine Fisheries ReviewVolume
53Issue/Article Nr
3Page Range
1-10Resource/Dataset Location
http://spo.nmfs.noaa.gov/mfr533/mfr5331.pdfCollections