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19 July 2017 An Analysis of the US Shrimp Market: A Mixed Demand Approach
Maryam Tabarestani, Walter R. Keithly, Hassan Marzoughi-Ardakani
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Abstract

This study examines the US demand for shrimp differentiated by source including eight import sources (China, Ecuador, India, Indonesia, Mexico, Thailand, Vietnam, and rest of world [ROW]) and three domestic sources (Gulf of Mexico landings by size category). Due to endogeneity of import quantities and exogeneity of Gulf of Mexico landings, by size category, a mixed Rotterdam demand model was used to estimate the eleven-equation demand system. Results associated with the import component of the model appear satisfactory, with negative own-price elasticities and positive cross-price elasticities (implying substitutability among import sources). Many of the cross-price elasticities, however, were small. A 1% change in all import prices was found to result in a 0.98% change in the Gulf of Mexico dockside price; an expected result given the large share of total US shrimp supply represented by imports.

JEL Codes: C32, D12, Q11, Q22.

© 2017 MRE Foundation, Inc. All rights reserved.
Maryam Tabarestani, Walter R. Keithly, and Hassan Marzoughi-Ardakani "An Analysis of the US Shrimp Market: A Mixed Demand Approach," Marine Resource Economics 32(4), 411-429, (19 July 2017). https://doi.org/10.1086/693360
Received: 17 October 2016; Accepted: 1 May 2017; Published: 19 July 2017
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KEYWORDS
Imports
mixed Rotterdam demand model
shrimp
trade
United States
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