Asymmetric Information, Externalities and Incentives in Animal Disease Prevention and Control

被引:58
作者
Hennessy, David A. [1 ]
Wolf, Christopher A. [2 ]
机构
[1] Michigan State Univ, Dept Agr Food & Resource Econ, Food & Agr Policy, E Lansing, MI 48824 USA
[2] Michigan State Univ, Dept Agr Food & Resource Econ, E Lansing, MI 48824 USA
关键词
Business continuity; complements; indemnity design; information asymmetry; infrastructure; principal-agent model; substitutes; MORAL HAZARD; LIVESTOCK DISEASE; BIOSECURITY; ECONOMICS;
D O I
10.1111/1477-9552.12113
中图分类号
F3 [农业经济];
学科分类号
0202 ; 020205 ; 1203 ;
摘要
Incentives influence behaviour while an understanding of farmer behaviour facilitates the control and prevention of infectious livestock disease. This paper lays out several perspectives on how information problems and other externalities affect biosecurity incentives. We use the principal-agent framework to examine livestock disease management in the presence of potential moral hazard and adverse selection. Moral hazard may apply to biosecurity decisions while adverse selection may apply to disease reporting. The example of compensation policies illustrates the importance of creating appropriate incentives: compensation must be sufficient to ensure early reporting but not so large as to discourage appropriate levels of biosecurity effort. Other cases of externalities are more diffuse than those modelled using principal-agent analysis, placing emphasis on third-party effects and coordination problems. Three examples are provided. One concerns free-riding when facing an endemic disease pool that can be managed by limiting sources and flows. Another regards coordination failure when securing against an exotic disease where farmer efforts complement and communicating actions are important. The last arises from absence of a risk market where an adverse infrastructural support externality could be managed by disease outbreak insurance.
引用
收藏
页码:226 / 242
页数:17
相关论文
共 26 条
[1]   The economics of controlling infectious diseases on dairy farms [J].
Chi, JW ;
Weersink, A ;
VanLeeuwen, JA ;
Keefe, GP .
CANADIAN JOURNAL OF AGRICULTURAL ECONOMICS-REVUE CANADIENNE D AGROECONOMIE, 2002, 50 (03) :237-256
[2]  
Cornes R.Sandler., 1986, THEORY EXTERNALITIES, VFirst
[3]   When Does Communication Improve Coordination? [J].
Ellingsen, Tore ;
Ostling, Robert .
AMERICAN ECONOMIC REVIEW, 2010, 100 (04) :1695-1724
[4]   Market Power and Import Bans: The Case of Japanese Pork Imports [J].
Felt, Marie-Helene ;
Gervais, Jean-Philippe ;
Larue, Bruno .
AGRIBUSINESS, 2011, 27 (01) :47-61
[5]   FOOD SAFETY PRESSURES PUSH INTEGRATION IN CHINA'S AGRICULTURAL SECTOR [J].
Gale, H. Frederick ;
Hu, Dinghuan .
AMERICAN JOURNAL OF AGRICULTURAL ECONOMICS, 2012, 94 (02) :483-488
[6]   Estimating within-herd preventive spillovers in livestock disease management [J].
Gramig, Benjamin M. ;
Wolf, Christopher A. .
AMERICAN JOURNAL OF AGRICULTURAL ECONOMICS, 2007, 89 (05) :1219-1225
[7]   Livestock Disease Indemnity Design When Moral Hazard Is Followed by Adverse Selection [J].
Gramig, Benjamin M. ;
Horan, Richard D. ;
Wolf, Christopher A. .
AMERICAN JOURNAL OF AGRICULTURAL ECONOMICS, 2009, 91 (03) :627-641
[8]   Biosecurity and spread of an infectious animal disease [J].
Hennessy, David A. .
AMERICAN JOURNAL OF AGRICULTURAL ECONOMICS, 2007, 89 (05) :1226-1231
[9]   Behavioral incentives, equilibrium endemic disease, and health management policy for farmed animals [J].
Hennessy, David A. .
AMERICAN JOURNAL OF AGRICULTURAL ECONOMICS, 2007, 89 (03) :698-711
[10]   Biosecurity incentives, network effects, and entry of a rapidly spreading pest [J].
Hennessy, David A. .
ECOLOGICAL ECONOMICS, 2008, 68 (1-2) :230-239