Authors
Carmen Arguedas, Gerdien W Meijerink, Daan van Soest
Publication date
2008/8
Journal
Proceedings of 12th EAAE Congress “People, Food and Environments: Global Trends and EU Strategies”, 26-29 August 2008, Ghent, Belgium
Description
Many conservation programs offer financial compensation to farmers in exchange for socially desired services, such as soil conservation or biodiversity protection. Realization of the conservation objective at minimum cost requires payments to just cover the extra costs incurred by each individual (type of) farmer. In the presence of information asymmetries regarding costs, incentivecompatible contracts can be designed to mitigate excess compensation, but these typically only provide partial improvement because of several distortions. We argue that these distortions are inevitable only if all conservation costs are variable in nature. If there are fixed costs too, we find that the least-cost solution can be incentive compatible. We identify the exact conditions under which these maximum savings can be obtained and conclude that, given the relevance of fixed costs in conservation services provision, incentive—compatible contracts deserve a second look.
Total citations
200620072008200920102011201220132014201511121111
Scholar articles
C Arguedas, GW Meijerink, D van Soest - Proceedings of 12th EAAE Congress “People, Food …, 2008