Investment behavior and status quo bias of conventional and organic hog farmers: An experimental approach

2015 ◽  
Vol 31 (4) ◽  
pp. 318-329 ◽  
Author(s):  
Daniel Hermann ◽  
Oliver Mußhoff ◽  
Katrin Agethen

AbstractDespite the economic benefits of organic farming, the conversion rates to this production method are low. The reasons for this reluctance are largely unknown; however, understanding this behavior is important for policy recommendations. Therefore, we experimentally investigate and compare the investment behavior of organic and conventional hog farmers. We examine whether the investment behavior depends on the organic or conventional farmers’ status quo of their production method. Our results show that farmers are more reluctant to invest in production methods they are not currently using compared with those already in use on their farm. Conventional, more risk-averse farmers, and those farmers holding a university degree, invest later in a hog barn. The results provide evidence that investment decisions depend on the status quo production method of a farmer and, thus, reveal that current subsidy structures may be ineffective in encouraging farmers to invest in production methods they are not currently using on their farms.

2020 ◽  
Vol 218 ◽  
pp. 01024
Author(s):  
Jingfei Wu

Industrial agglomeration is considered by many scholars as a spatial organization that can achieve the highest economic benefits. This article combines the status quo of the export trade of mechanical and electrical products in Jiangsu Province, summarizes its export advantages and difficulties faced by exports, and analyzes the main influencing factors of the formation, development, maturity, and decline of Jiangsu’s mechanical and electrical industry clustering from the perspective of the industrial cluster life cycle and the weight of each influencing factor, aiming to inject new vitality into the export of Jiangsu’s electromechanical industry, bring better development opportunities, and walk away from emerging development bottlenecks.


2021 ◽  
Vol 10 (4) ◽  
Author(s):  
Anish Guddati ◽  
Dhruva Bhat

The last few years have seen a rise in trading apps, and Robinhood is one trading app that has attracted millennials. This paper explores trading apps such as Robinhood and their role in providing financial inclusion and safe trading opportunities. This paper discusses investment behavior in the status quo, explaining overconfidence, sociability, and the disposition effect. Investment behavior can include the behavioral biases and common notions investors utilize for trading. Furthermore, this paper assesses the design and business model of Robinhood. Five expert investors were interviewed (such as a professor and other MBA graduates from Wharton School of Business, financial experts from private equity firms in the US and Mexico, and a JP Morgan investment banking professional), and five casual investors were interviewed to understand their opinions on investment behavior, certain trading apps, common criticisms of stock trading, and solutions to these concerns. The findings led to the conclusion that investment behavior is harmful in the status quo. Results did indicate that Robinhood does promote at least some dangerous behavior through excessive active trading and is one example of a problematic trading app through the 4th Industrial Revolution, but trading apps can only amplify behavioral biases most retail investors already display.


2006 ◽  
Vol 63 (4) ◽  
pp. 903-916 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mark Lucas Soboil ◽  
Jon G Sutinen

This paper reports the results of a bioeconomic evaluation of alternative management strategies for the Georges Bank transboundary multispecies fishery. Because the distribution of the principal groundfish resources on Georges Bank involves substantial movement and migration across the US–Canada boundary, the harvest by one country affects the benefits to the other country. An empirically based model of the transboundary multispecies fishery was built to simulate alternative management strategies imposed by each country. The simulations were used to help determine whether the status quo management is superior to any other strategy and, if not, what other strategies are better in terms of economic performance. Our aim is to determine whether there are combinations of US and Canadian harvest policies that would make both countries better off and whether a “win–win” strategy exists in the fishery. The results suggest that there are win–win strategies in terms of economic benefits, but such strategies may not be legally feasible under current fisheries law.


2019 ◽  
Author(s):  
Oceana ◽  
Louise Teh ◽  
Rashid Sumaila

Many fish populations in Canada are depleted and at risk of further decline. Fisheries loss jeopardizes the social, economic, and health well-being of thousands of Canadians and is therefore of national concern. However, of 56 fish stocks assessed as being in a Critical or Cautious state, only three have rebuilding plans developed for them. As such, there is an urgent need to intensify Canada’s fisheries rebuilding efforts. One of the challenges facing rebuilding fisheries is that it often necessitates an immediate and substantial reduction in fishing mortality. This invariably involves forgoing certain short-term benefits in order to gain the benefits of rebuilt fish stocks in the medium and long term. To investigate the economic and social implications of rebuilding Canada’s fisheries, this study analyzes the socio-economic costs and benefits of rebuilding Canada’s fisheries under six different scenarios of species’ recovery rates and management strategies. We conduct the analysis for six fish stocks representing different biological life histories, geographic distribution, state of fisheries depletion, and socio-economic importance to coastal communities. These fish stocks include: i) Pacific herring Central Coast stock; ii) West Coast Vancouver Island chinook salmon — both aggregate abundance-based management (AABM) and individual stock-based management (ISBM) components; iii) yelloweye rockfish outside population; iv) Atlantic cod NAFO Division 2J3KL; v) Gulf of St. Lawrence Atlantic herring spring spawners NAFO Division 4T; and vi) Atlantic redfish Units 1 and 2.Our results indicate that overall, for the time period studied, all fish stocks — except yelloweye rockfish, which is a long-lived species with a low natural growth rate — would likely experience economic gains from fisheries rebuilding relative to the status quo. Under the most optimistic scenario, northern cod (which has, among the fisheries studied, one of the largest current catch and number of fishers) and Pacific herring are projected to benefit the most by the end of the analysis period, with potential economic gains of seven and 11 times above the status quo, respectively. Under the least optimistic scenario, this gain drops to 0.85 and five times above the status quo, respectively. In most cases, a management strategy involving fishery closure results in higher potential economic gains compared to a low-fishing strategy, regardless of the rate of fish-stock recovery. Not surprisingly, slow recovery scenarios are projected to result in the fewest economic gains. An intergenerational discounting approach, which seeks to explicitly incorporate the interests of future generations in the analysis, increases projected economic benefits compared to conventional discounting, thereby emphasizing the importance of taking a long-term perspective to fisheries rebuilding. Using fish stock assessments as a basis, we estimate that once fish stocks are rebuilt, they can support catches that range from 1.3 to 18 times above the status quo catch level. In terms of social impact, an estimated 5,100 fishers are currently involved in fisheries for the case study fish stocks, who can thus potentially benefit from this projected increase in fish catch in the future. The overall benefits of rebuilding are magnified if we consider the thousands more people in coastal communities who have food, cultural, and other social connections to fish stocks. While rebuilding may likely incur short-term costs for fishers and coastal communities, these need to be seen in light of the fact that without rebuilding and effective fisheries management, we have lost significant amounts of food, jobs, and incomes over the recent decades, and we could lose everything if and when the fish stocks collapse. Recall the cost to fishers and society when the cod stocks off Newfoundland collapsed in 1992.Our results suggest that bearing this short-term cost can lead to economic benefits, which in the long term are an improvement over maintaining the status quo. This suggests that accounting for social impacts is crucial in developing rebuilding plans, especially in terms of access to and allocation of projected economic benefits from rebuilt fish stocks in the future. This study further highlights that rebuilding plans have to be developed while bearing in mind that anticipated fish stock recovery can either be delayed or sped up by future changes in environmental conditions, which, although not modelled here, can change projected economic outcomes. While we show that fisheries rebuilding can improve the biological and economic state of Canadian fish stocks overall, it is also important to emphasize the need for Canada to have strong precautionary fisheries management practices in place for species that are not currently depleted so that fish stocks are managed sustainably, avoiding the need for rebuilding.


Significance As emir and before that as foreign minister, Sabah was the key architect of the moderate foreign policy that characterises Kuwait today. The new ruler, Nawaf, was formerly deputy commander of the military. He is a broadly uncontroversial figure associated with the status quo, but who recently sought to reach out to the opposition. Impacts A new legislature by December will focus on condemning corruption and protecting Kuwaitis’ economic benefits. Normalisation of ties with Israel remains unlikely. Demographic and health issues under COVID-19 will be key immediate challenges.


2015 ◽  
Vol 21 (4) ◽  
pp. 532-555 ◽  
Author(s):  
Getachew Nigatu ◽  
Ariel Dinar

AbstractWe propose an ‘allocate-and-trade’ institution to manage the eastern Nile River Basin for Ethiopia, Sudan and Egypt as the basin faces a new reality of the Grand Ethiopian Renaissance Dam (GERD). We find that a social planner could increase the region's economic welfare by assigning water rights to the riparian states. An alternative intrabasin water rights arrangement and trade could achieve more than 95 per cent of the welfare created by the social planner. GERD will change both the economic benefits and hydrological positions of the riparian countries. Economic benefits from alternative water use would be sufficient to make riparian countries better off compared with the status quo. Furthermore, riparian countries could raise more than US$680 m annually for protecting and conserving the natural resources of the region.


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