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支付是否值得?来自参与哥斯达黎加生态系统服务付费计划的证据。

Do Payments Pay Off? Evidence from Participation in Costa Rica's PES Program.

作者信息

Arriagada R A, Sills E O, Ferraro P J, Pattanayak S K

机构信息

Millennium Nucleus Center for Socioeconomic Impact of Environmental Policies (CESIEP), Center of Applied Ecology and Sustainability (CAPES), Department of Agricultural Economics, Pontificia Universidad Católica de Chile, Avenida Vicuña Mackenna 4860, Macul, Santiago, Chile.

Department of Forestry and Environmental Resources, North Carolina State University, Raleigh, North Carolina, United States of America.

出版信息

PLoS One. 2015 Jul 10;10(7):e0131544. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0131544. eCollection 2015.

Abstract

Payments for environmental services (PES) are often viewed as a way to simultaneously improve conservation outcomes and the wellbeing of rural households who receive the payments. However, evidence for such win-win outcomes has been elusive. We add to the growing literature on conservation program impacts by using primary household survey data to evaluate the socioeconomic impacts of participation in Costa Rica's PES program. Despite the substantial cash transfers to voluntary participants in this program, we do not detect any evidence of impacts on their wealth or self-reported well-being using a quasi-experimental design. These results are consistent with the common claim that voluntary PES do not harm participants, but they beg the question of why landowners participate if they do not benefit. Landowners in our sample voluntarily renewed their contracts after five years in the program and thus are unlikely to have underestimated their costs of participation. They apparently did not invest additional income from the program in farm inputs such as cattle or hired labor, since both decreased as a result of participation. Nor do we find evidence that participation encouraged moves off-farm. Instead, semi-structured interviews suggest that participants joined the program to secure their property rights and contribute to the public good of forest conservation. Thus, in order to understand the social impacts of PES, we need to look beyond simple economic rationales and material outcomes.

摘要

环境服务付费(PES)通常被视为一种既能改善保护成效又能提升获得付费的农村家庭福祉的方式。然而,这种双赢结果的证据一直难以寻觅。我们通过使用家庭层面的原始调查数据来评估参与哥斯达黎加环境服务付费项目的社会经济影响,从而为关于保护项目影响方面不断增多的文献增添了内容。尽管该项目向自愿参与者提供了大量现金转移支付,但我们采用准实验设计并未发现任何对其财富或自我报告福祉有影响的证据。这些结果与自愿性环境服务付费不会损害参与者这一普遍观点一致,但也引发了一个问题:如果土地所有者没有从中受益,他们为何还要参与?我们样本中的土地所有者在参与该项目五年后自愿续签了合同,因此不太可能低估了他们的参与成本。他们显然没有将该项目带来的额外收入投入到诸如牲畜或雇佣劳动力等农业投入中,因为参与项目后这两者都减少了。我们也没有发现参与项目促使人们离开农业的证据。相反,半结构化访谈表明,参与者加入该项目是为了保障其产权并为森林保护这一公共利益做出贡献。因此,为了理解环境服务付费的社会影响,我们需要超越简单的经济理性和物质成果去探究。

https://cdn.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/blobs/219b/4498908/2240f53b71c0/pone.0131544.g001.jpg

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