Performance Payments for Groups: The Case of Carnivore Conservation in Northern Sweden
Version
Published
Date Issued
2014
Author(s)
Type
Article
Language
English
Abstract
This paper presents a first empirical assessment of carnivore conservation under a performance payment scheme. In Sweden, reindeer herder villages are paid based on the number of lynx (lynx lynx) and wolverine (gulo gulo) offspring certified on their pastures. The villages decide on the internal payment distribution. It is generally assumed that benefit distribution rules are exogenous. We investigate them as an endogenous decision. The data reveals that villages’ group size has a direct negative effect on conservation outcomes and an indirect positive effect which impacts conservation outcomes through the benefit distribution rule. This result revises the collective action hypothesis on purely negative effects of group size.
Subjects
GE Environmental Sciences
Publisher DOI
Journal or Serie
Environmental and Resource Economics
ISSN
0924-6460
Organization
Volume
59
Issue
4
Publisher
Springer Netherlands
Submitter
ServiceAccount
Citation apa
Zabel von Felten, A. M., Bostedt, G., & Engel, S. (2014). Performance Payments for Groups: The Case of Carnivore Conservation in Northern Sweden. In Environmental and Resource Economics (Vol. 59, Issue 4, pp. 613–631). Springer Netherlands. https://doi.org/10.24451/arbor.6064
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10.1007_s10640-013-9752-x.pdf
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published
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