Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
5050186 | Ecological Economics | 2012 | 8 Pages |
Fish stocks can be considered as natural capital stocks providing harvestable fish. Fishing at low stock sizes means borrowing from the natural asset. While fishing a particular quantity generates immediate profits and income, an interest rate has to be paid in terms of foregone future fishing income, as the fish stock's reproductive capacity remains low and fishing costs stay high. In this paper we propose to apply the concept of shadow interest rate to quantify the degree of overfishing. It incorporates the relevant biological and economic information and compares across fish stocks. We calculate the shadow interest rates for 13 major European fish stocks and find these rates to range from 10% to more than 200%. The concept of the shadow interest rate can be used to make the economic consequences of overfishing transparent and to evaluate the profitability of short-term catch reductions as investments in natural capital stocks.
Graphical AbstractDownload full-size imageHighlights⺠We propose the concept of shadow interest rate to quantify the degree of overfishing. ⺠Shadow interest rates incorporate the relevant biological and economic information. ⺠Shadow interest rates compare across fish stocks. ⺠We quantify shadow interest rates for 13 major European fish stocks. ⺠We find shadow interest rates between 10% and more than 200%.