Premium
Abdicating Responsibility: The Deceits of Fisheries Policy
Author(s) -
Bromley Daniel W.
Publication year - 2009
Publication title -
fisheries
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.725
H-Index - 79
eISSN - 1548-8446
pISSN - 0363-2415
DOI - 10.1577/1548-8446-34.6.280
Subject(s) - fishing , nothing , fish <actinopterygii> , fish stock , business , fisheries management , natural resource economics , fishery , economics , public economics , market economy , philosophy , epistemology , biology
The imperiled status of global fish stocks offers clear evidence of the comprehensive failure of national governments to provide coherent management to protect those stocks. The universal policy response to this failure seems to consist of nothing more imaginative than the free gifting to the commercial fishing sector of permanent endowments of income and wealth under the utopian claims associated with individual transferable quotas (ITQs). It now seems that the fishing industry is to be entrusted to become exemplary stewards, to become efficient, to maximize resource rent, to stop racing for fish, and to make society better off. These exultant promises are rendered false by the incoherent models from fisheries economics that are confused about the essential concepts of: