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1 September 2011 Source-Based Preferences and U.S. Salmon Imports
ANDREW MUHAMMAD
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Abstract

This study examined U.S. demand for salmon imports differentiated by source (Canada, Chile, and the rest of the world [ROW]), product cut (fillets and other salmon products), and form (fresh and frozen). The Rotterdam model was used in estimation, and source-aggregation tests were performed to determine the significance of source differentiation in analysis. We also performed separability tests to determine if import preferences were source-wise dependent or source independent. Test results strongly reject source aggregation; however, source-wise dependence could not be rejected. Furthermore, source-aggregated demand was significantly more price-elastic when compared to source-wise dependent demand. Results show that import preferences are not homogeneous across exporting countries, and there is significant information loss when source differentiation is not considered.

JEL Classification Code: F14, Q11, Q17, Q22

ANDREW MUHAMMAD "Source-Based Preferences and U.S. Salmon Imports," Marine Resource Economics 26(3), 191-209, (1 September 2011). https://doi.org/10.5950/0738-1360-26.3.191
Published: 1 September 2011
JOURNAL ARTICLE
19 PAGES

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KEYWORDS
demand
Imports
Rotterdam model
salmon
source differentiation
United States
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