Fenichel Eli P, Richards Timothy J, Shanafelt David W
Yale School of Forestry and Environmental Studies, New Haven, CT 06511, 203.432.5114.
Arizona State University, Morrison School of Agribusiness and Resource Management, Mesa AZ 85212.
Environ Resour Econ (Dordr). 2014 Oct 1;59(2):231-255. doi: 10.1007/s10640-013-9726-z.
Invasive pests cross property boundaries. Property managers may have private incentives to control invasive species despite not having sufficient incentive to fully internalize the external costs of their role in spreading the invasion. Each property manager has a right to future use of his own property, but his property may abut others' properties enabling spread of an invasive species. The incentives for a foresighted property manager to control invasive species have received little attention. We consider the efforts of a foresighted property manager who has rights to future use of a property and has the ability to engage in repeated, discrete control activities. We find that higher rates of dispersal, associated with proximity to neighboring properties, reduce the private incentives for control. Controlling species at one location provides incentives to control at a neighboring location. Control at neighboring locations are strategic complements and coupled with spatial heterogeneity lead to a weaker-link public good problem, in which each property owner is unable to fully appropriate the benefits of his own control activity. Future-use rights and private costs suggest that there is scope for a series of Coase-like exchanges to internalize much of the costs associated with species invasion. Pigouvian taxes on invasive species potentially have qualitatively perverse behavioral effects. A tax with a strong income effect (e.g, failure of effective revenue recycling) can reduce the value of property assets and diminish the incentive to manage insects on one's own property.
入侵性害虫会跨越产权边界。尽管物业管理者没有足够的动力去充分内化其在传播入侵物种过程中所扮演角色的外部成本,但他们可能有控制入侵物种的私人动机。每位物业管理者都有权在未来使用自己的物业,但其物业可能与他人的物业相邻,从而使得入侵物种得以传播。有远见的物业管理者控制入侵物种的动机很少受到关注。我们考虑一位有远见的物业管理者的努力,他有权在未来使用一处物业,并有能力进行反复的、离散的控制活动。我们发现,与邻近物业的距离相关的更高扩散率会降低控制的私人动机。在一个地点控制物种会促使在邻近地点进行控制。邻近地点的控制是战略互补的,并且与空间异质性相结合会导致一个弱连接公共品问题,即每个物业所有者无法完全获取其自身控制活动的收益。未来使用权和私人成本表明,存在一系列类似科斯式的交易空间,以将与物种入侵相关的大部分成本内部化。对入侵物种征收庇古税可能会产生性质上反常的行为影响。具有强烈收入效应的税收(例如,有效税收回收失败)会降低物业资产的价值,并减少在自己物业上管理昆虫的动机。