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15 January 2015 Whatever Happened to the Wreckfish Fishery? An Evaluation of the Oldest Finfish ITQ Program in the United States
Tracy Yandle
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Abstract

The wreckfish individual transferable quota (ITQ) program started in 1992 and is the oldest finfish ITQ program in the United States. Initially, the program appeared to be a success, bringing order to the previous years' derbies. Ex-vessel prices rose, harvest stabilized, and there was an orderly shrinking of the fleet to an economically appropriate size. The subsequent history of the fishery is more complex. ITQ sales dwindled in 1995, then ceased for 13 years. Harvest plummeted to barely a tenth of the eligible quota, and in 2010 the fleet's quota was reduced 88%.

Was the wreckfish ITQ program a failure? We provide the first published analysis of the program in two decades. We examine the decisions of former participants to leave the fishery. We also examine the program's current economic, biological, and regulatory performance compared to the program's original stated goals and the goals associated with ITQs in the literature.

JEL Codes: D72, D73, D78, N52, Q22, Q28, Q58.

© 2015 MRE Foundation, Inc. All rights reserved.
Tracy Yandle "Whatever Happened to the Wreckfish Fishery? An Evaluation of the Oldest Finfish ITQ Program in the United States," Marine Resource Economics 30(2), 193-217, (15 January 2015). https://doi.org/10.1086/679974
Received: 24 May 2014; Accepted: 1 August 2014; Published: 15 January 2015
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KEYWORDS
Catch shares
evaluation
individual transferrable quotas
ITQs
Polyprion americanus
SES Framework
Social-Ecological Systems Framework
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