Simulating the impacts of trade restrcitions: an application to the European salmon trade

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Standard

Simulating the impacts of trade restrcitions : an application to the European salmon trade. / Aarset, Bernt; Asche, Frank; Jensen, Carsten Lynge.

I: Aquaculture Economics & Management, Bind 10, Nr. 3, 2006, s. 201-221.

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftTidsskriftartikelfagfællebedømt

Harvard

Aarset, B, Asche, F & Jensen, CL 2006, 'Simulating the impacts of trade restrcitions: an application to the European salmon trade', Aquaculture Economics & Management, bind 10, nr. 3, s. 201-221. https://doi.org/10.1080/13657300600985348

APA

Aarset, B., Asche, F., & Jensen, C. L. (2006). Simulating the impacts of trade restrcitions: an application to the European salmon trade. Aquaculture Economics & Management, 10(3), 201-221. https://doi.org/10.1080/13657300600985348

Vancouver

Aarset B, Asche F, Jensen CL. Simulating the impacts of trade restrcitions: an application to the European salmon trade. Aquaculture Economics & Management. 2006;10(3):201-221. https://doi.org/10.1080/13657300600985348

Author

Aarset, Bernt ; Asche, Frank ; Jensen, Carsten Lynge. / Simulating the impacts of trade restrcitions : an application to the European salmon trade. I: Aquaculture Economics & Management. 2006 ; Bind 10, Nr. 3. s. 201-221.

Bibtex

@article{80a0d16a105e4a6c9149e9fe93b909a3,
title = "Simulating the impacts of trade restrcitions: an application to the European salmon trade",
abstract = "During the last decade there has been a number of conflicts in relation to the trade of salmon in the EU. A 5-year agreement between Norway and the EU including an import constraint and a voluntary minimum import price agreement for exporter just expired, with a 13% tariff to be paid by exporters that do not accept the agreement. A year after the agreement expired, there are again calls for safeguard measure to protect EU-producers. We investigate the expected welfare effects of this tariff by analyzing a general equilibrium demand curve. In contrast to earlier studies we use a derived demand approach rather the consumer demand as most available data are at the trade level. The results indicate that only Norwegian exporters are beneficial to target for EU producers. The total welfare effect of the tariff depends critically on the supply structure of EU and Norwegian salmon.",
keywords = "Former LIFE faculty",
author = "Bernt Aarset and Frank Asche and Jensen, {Carsten Lynge}",
year = "2006",
doi = "10.1080/13657300600985348",
language = "English",
volume = "10",
pages = "201--221",
journal = "Aquaculture, Economics and Management",
issn = "1365-7305",
publisher = "Taylor & Francis",
number = "3",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Simulating the impacts of trade restrcitions

T2 - an application to the European salmon trade

AU - Aarset, Bernt

AU - Asche, Frank

AU - Jensen, Carsten Lynge

PY - 2006

Y1 - 2006

N2 - During the last decade there has been a number of conflicts in relation to the trade of salmon in the EU. A 5-year agreement between Norway and the EU including an import constraint and a voluntary minimum import price agreement for exporter just expired, with a 13% tariff to be paid by exporters that do not accept the agreement. A year after the agreement expired, there are again calls for safeguard measure to protect EU-producers. We investigate the expected welfare effects of this tariff by analyzing a general equilibrium demand curve. In contrast to earlier studies we use a derived demand approach rather the consumer demand as most available data are at the trade level. The results indicate that only Norwegian exporters are beneficial to target for EU producers. The total welfare effect of the tariff depends critically on the supply structure of EU and Norwegian salmon.

AB - During the last decade there has been a number of conflicts in relation to the trade of salmon in the EU. A 5-year agreement between Norway and the EU including an import constraint and a voluntary minimum import price agreement for exporter just expired, with a 13% tariff to be paid by exporters that do not accept the agreement. A year after the agreement expired, there are again calls for safeguard measure to protect EU-producers. We investigate the expected welfare effects of this tariff by analyzing a general equilibrium demand curve. In contrast to earlier studies we use a derived demand approach rather the consumer demand as most available data are at the trade level. The results indicate that only Norwegian exporters are beneficial to target for EU producers. The total welfare effect of the tariff depends critically on the supply structure of EU and Norwegian salmon.

KW - Former LIFE faculty

U2 - 10.1080/13657300600985348

DO - 10.1080/13657300600985348

M3 - Journal article

VL - 10

SP - 201

EP - 221

JO - Aquaculture, Economics and Management

JF - Aquaculture, Economics and Management

SN - 1365-7305

IS - 3

ER -

ID: 41888062