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Subsidies in Irish Fisheries: Saving Rural Ireland?

Vilhajalmur Wiium
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Vilhajalmur Wiium: Department of Economics, National University of Ireland, Galway

No 32, Working Papers from National University of Ireland Galway, Department of Economics

Abstract: Subsidies in the world's fishing industry have long been considered to have harmful effects on fish stocks. The fishing industry has suffered from over-capacity for many years, and subsidies encourage investment, leading to greater capacity and more pressure on fish stocks, many of which are already exploited close to extinction. However, this paper argues, that not all fishery subsidies have this effect on the fish resource. In Ireland, there is evidence suggesting that fishery subsidies are used increasingly for the purpose of employment creation in disadvantaged regions, through land-based investment, rather than to increase fishing capacity. Abolishing fishery subsidies in Ireland is, therefore, not likely to have huge effects on the fishing fleet, while the effects on rural communities could be grave. For politicians ever to consider the removal of subsidies, alternative policies must be developed to assist people that live in disadvantaged regions.

JEL-codes: Q22 (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 1998, Revised 1998
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