Hostname: page-component-78c5997874-fbnjt Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-10T10:59:25.313Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Saving the Whales: Lessons from the Extinction of the Eastern Arctic Bowhead

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  10 June 2004

ROBERT C. ALLEN
Affiliation:
Professor, Nuffield College, Oxford University, Oxford, United Kingdom, OX1 1NF. E-mail: bob.allen@nuffield.oxford.ac.uk
IAN KEAY
Affiliation:
Assistant Professor, Department of Economics and School of Environmental Studies, Queen's University, Kingston, Ontario, Canada, K7L 3N6. E-mail: ikeay@qed.econ.queensu.ca

Abstract

In this article we investigate the possibility that a regulatory regime designed to maximize the profitability of the early Dutch whaling industry could have simultaneously guaranteed the biological sustainability of the eastern Arctic Bowhead whale. We find that policies with economic profit as the sole objective could have saved the whales, as well as increasing the incomes of the whalers, under assumptions commonly made in fisheries models. However, the necessary assumptions are implausible. Under more historically relevant assumptions we find that regulation could not have simultaneously increased profits and preserved the stock of whales.

Type
ARTICLES
Copyright
© 2004 The Economic History Association

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Allen Robert C. 2001The Great Divergence: Wages and Prices in Europe From the Middle Ages to the First World War.” Explorations in Economic History 38, no. 4: 41147.Google Scholar
Allen Robert C., and Ian Keay. 2001The First Great Whale Extinction: The End of the Bowhead Whale in the Eastern Arctic.” Explorations in Economic History 38, no. 4: 44877.Google Scholar
Amundsen E. S., T. Bjorndal, and Jon Conrad. 1995Open Access Harvesting of the Northeast Atlantic Minke Whale.” Environmental and Resource Economics 6, no. 2: 16785.Google Scholar
Bockstoce J. 1986. Whales, Ice and Men: The History of Whaling in the Western Arctic. Seattle: University of Washington Press
Braham Howard W. 1984The Bowhead Whale, Balaena Mysticetus.” Marine Fisheries Review 46, no. 4: 54553.Google Scholar
Buchanan James M., and Gordon Tullock. 1975Polluters' Profits and Political Response: Direct Controls Versus Taxes.” American Economic Review 65, no. 1: 13947.Google Scholar
Carlos Ann, and Frank Lewis. 1999Property Rights, Competition, and Depletion in the Eighteenth Century Canadian Fur Trade: The Role of the European Market.” Canadian Journal of Economics 32, no. 3: 70528.Google Scholar
Chapman D. 1981. “Evaluation of Marine Mammal Population Models.” In Dynamics of Large Mammal Populations, edited by C. W. Fowler and T. D. Smith, pp. 27796. Toronto: John Wiley
Clark C. W. 1973The Economics of Over Exploitation.” Science 181, no. 4100: 63034.Google Scholar
Clark C. W. 1976A Delayed-Recruitment Model of Population Dynamics, With an Application to Baleen Whale Populations.” Journal of Mathematical Biology 3, no. 4: 38191.Google Scholar
Clark C. W., F. H. Clarke, and G. R. Munro. 1979The Optimal Exploitation of Renewable Resource Stocks: Problems of Irreversible Investment.” Econometrica 47, no. 1: 2547.Google Scholar
Clark C. W., and R. Lamberson R. 1982An Economic History of Pelagic Whaling.” Marine Policy 6, no. 1: 10320.Google Scholar
Conrad Jon. 1989Bioeconomics and the Bowhead Whale.” Journal of Political Economy 97, no. 4: 97487.Google Scholar
Copeland Brian. 1999. “Taxes Versus Standards to Control Pollution in Imperfectly Competitive Markets.” University of British Columbia Discussion Paper 91–03, Vancouver, BC,
Craig Lee A., and Charles R. Knoeber. 1992Manager Shareholding, the Market for Managers, and the End-Period Problem: Evidence from the U.S. Whaling Industry.” Journal of Law, Economics and Organization 8, no. 3: 60727.Google Scholar
Dasgupta P. S., and G. M. Heal. 1979. Economic Theory and Exhaustible Resources. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press
Davis Lance, Robert Gallman, and Karin Gleiter. 1997. In Pursuit of Leviathan. Chicago: University of Chicago Press
de Jong C. 1983. “The Hunt of the Greenland Whales: A Short History and Statistical Sources.” In Report of the International Whaling Commission, Special Issue No. 5, edited by M. F. Tillman and G. P. Donovan, pp. 83106. Cambridge: International Whaling Commission
de Vries Jan, and O. van der Oude. 1997. The First Modern Economy. New York: Cambridge University Press
Gordon H. S. 1954Economic Theory of a Common Property Resource: The Fishery.” Journal of Political Economy 62, no. 1: 12442.Google Scholar
Hacquebord Louwrens. 2001Three Centuries of Whaling and Walrus Hunting in Svalbard and its Impact on the Arctic Ecosystem.” Environment and History 7, no. 2: 16985.Google Scholar
Hardin Garret. 1968The Tragedy of the Commons.” Science 162, no. 3859: 124348.Google Scholar
Hartwick John M. 1977Intergenerational Equity and the Investing of Rents from Exhaustible Resources.” American Economic Review 67, no. 5: 97274.Google Scholar
Howe C. W. 1994Taxes Versus Tradable Discharge Permits: A Review in the Light of the U.S. and European Experience.” Environmental and Resource Economics 4, no. 1: 15169.Google Scholar
Jackson G. 1978. The British Whaling Trade. Hamden: Archon Books
Jenkins J. T. 1921 A History of the Whale Fisheries. Port Washington: Kennikat Press (Reprinted 1971).
Levhari D., and L. J. Mirman. 1980The Great Fish War: An Example Using a Dynamic Cournot-Nash Solution.” Bell Journal of Economics 11, no. 1: 32244.Google Scholar
Mitchell Edward. 1977. Initial Population Size of Bowhead Whale (Balaena Mysticetus) Stocks: Cumulative Catch Estimates. Scientific Committee of the International Whaling Commission, Number SC/29/Doc33, Cambridge,
Munro Gordon R. 1990The Optimal Management of Transboundary Fisheries: Game Theoretic Considerations.” Natural Resource Modeling 4, no. 4: 40326.Google Scholar
Neher Phillip. 1990. Natural Resource Economics. New York: Cambridge University Press
Porter R. C. 1982The New Approach to Wilderness Preservation Through Benefit-Cost Analysis.” Journal of Environmental Economics and Management 9, no. 1: 5980.Google Scholar
Proulx J-P. 1986. Whaling in the North Atlantic from the Earliest Times to the Mid-19th Century. Ottawa: Parks Canada
Ricard S. 1781. Traite Generale du Commerce, Volume 1. Amsterdam: E. von Harrevelt and A. Soetens
Ross W. G. 1979The Annual Catch of Greenland (Bowhead) Whales in Waters North of Canada, 1719–1915: A Preliminary Compilation.” Arctic 32, no. 1: 91121.Google Scholar
Ruseski Gorzad. 1998International Fish Wars: The Strategic Roles for Fleet Licensing and Effort Subsidies.” Journal of Environmental Economics and Management 36, no. 1: 7088.Google Scholar
Scorsby W. 1820. An Account of the Arctic Regions With a History and Description of the Northern Whale Fishery, Volume 2. Edinburgh: Archibald, Constable
Scott Anthony. 1973. Natural Resources: The Economics of Conservation. Toronto: McClelland and Stewart
Scott Anthony. 1996. “The I.T.Q. as a Property Right: Where It Came From, How It Works, and Where It is Going.” In Taking Ownership, edited by Brian Crowley, pp. 3198. Halifax: Atlantic Institute for Market Studies
Schaefer M. B. 1957Some Considerations of Population Dynamics and Economics in Relation to the Management of Marine Fisheries.” Journal of the Fisheries Research Board of Canada 14: 66981.Google Scholar
Smith Vernon L. 1969On Models of Commercial Fishing.” Journal of Political Economy 77, no. 2: 18198.Google Scholar
Tietenberg Tom. 2001. Environmental and Natural Resource Economics Fifth Edition. Toronto: Addison, Wesley, Longman
Vibe C. 1967. “Arctic Animals in Relation to Climatic Fluctuations.” In The Danish Zoogeographical Investigations in Greenland, 127. Copenhagen: C.A. Reitzels Forlag
Weitzman M. L. 1974Prices Versus Quantities.” Review of Economic Studies 41, no. 4: 47791.Google Scholar