How scarcity is affected by private property rights in case

Assignment Help Microeconomics
Reference no: EM131224035

Economics

Read the case study on page 27 "Protecting Endangered Species with Private Property Rights." Write an essay 1,000-1,250 words, answering the following questions:

1. Economists argue that scarcity is different than poverty. To understand why many wild animals are scarce we need to look at scarcity in the context of private property. Explain how scarcity is affected by private property rights in the case study.

2. Compare and contrast how incentives accompanying private property rights can both help protect and endanger the rhino, an endangered species.

Be sure to cite at least three relevant scholarly sources in support of your content. These sources can include trade journals and think tank reports.

Case study....

Protecting Endangered Species with Private Property Rights.

Have you ever wondered why the wild tiger is endangered in much of the world but most cats are thriving? Or why spotted owls are threatened in the Pacific Northwest but chickens are not? Why have elephant and rhinoceros' populations declined in number but not cattle or hogs? The incentives accompanying private ownership provide the answer. To understand why many wild animals are scarce, consider what happens with animals that provide food, most of which are privately owned. Suppose that people decided to eat less beef. Beef prices would fall, and the incentive for individuals to dedicate land and other resources to raise cattle would decline. The result would be fewer cows. The market demand for beef creates the incentive for suppliers to maintain herds of cattle and to protect them under a system of private ownership. In some ways, the rhinoceros is similar to a cow. A rhino, like a large bull in a cattle herd, may charge if disturbed. At 3,000 pounds, a charging rhino can be very dangerous to humans. Also like cattle, rhinos can be valuable to people-a single horn from a black rhino, used for artistic carvings and medicines, can sell for up to $30,000. But when hunting rhinos and selling their horns is illegal, rhinos become a favorite target of poachers-people who hunt illegally. Poachers are sometimes even assisted by local people eager to see fewer rhinos present because rhinos make life risky for humans and they also compete for food and water. However, rhinos are very different from cattle in one important respect: in most of Africa where they naturally range, private ownership of the rhino is prohibited. Since 1977, many nations have outlawed rhino hunting and forbidden the sale of rhino parts. But this approach has only made things worse for the rhino: between 1970 and 1994, the number of black rhinos declined by 95%.

1. According to South African economist Michael 't Sas-Rolfes, the trade ban "has not had a discernible effect on rhino numbers and does not seem to have stopped the trade in rhino horn. If anything, the . . . listings led to a sharp increase in the black market price of rhino horn, which simply fueled further poaching and encouraged speculative stockpiling of horn." But what if the powerful incentives created by private ownership were instead brought to bear on the rhino? That actually happened for a while in Zimbabwe. Landowners were allowed to fence and manage game animals on their property. Because they could profit from protecting the big animals, some ranchers shifted their operations from producing cattle to wildlife protection, ecotourism, and hunting, often in cooperation with neighboring landowners. Under these rules, the black rhino population climbed dramatically. And because ranchers were allowed to cooperate and combine operations, they could reduce fencing between ranches and manage the larger preserves as a unit, better helping not only rhinos but other valued wildlife as well. Indeed, several parts of southern Africa have a tradition, extending back to the 1960s, of allowing ownership of wildlife. Namibia, for example, gave those rights to private landholders in the 1960s and extended them to communal lands in the mid-1990s. With this policy change, tribal communities began to hold ownership rights over the wildlife in their communal areas and were able to keep all revenues from wildlife. This transformed the incentives in Namibia. By 2007, Namibian communities were receiving $4.3 million from wildlife, says Fred Nelson, a wildlife expert who spent 11 years in Africa developing wildlife management partnerships. The revenues come primarily from trophy hunting and tourism ventures-important new opportunities in semi-arid areas where income-earning options are limited.

2. To ensure that trophy hunting of elephants, lions, and other animals would be profitable, local communities had to protect the animals and their habitat. These new incentives have led to a natural resurgence in wildlife numbers-lions are returning to areas where they had been overhunted-as well as deliberate restocking of wildlife. Even the number of black rhinos in Namibia has risen from 707 in 1997, to 1,134 in 2004. Citing the 40 years of progress in Namibia, first by giving private ranchers rights to wildlife on their property and then extending them to tribal communities, Nelson told an interviewer in 2013, "This is an extraordinary achievement due to a very iconoclastic approach to conservation."

3. Clearly, property rights to ownership or use are one key to conservation.

References case study

1. See Michael De Alessi, Private Conservation and Black Rhinos in

Zimbabwe: The Savé Valley and Bubiana Conservancies, available online at
www.cei.org/gencon/025,01687.cfm.

2. Fred Nelson, "Conservation Can Work: Southern Africa Shows Its Neighbours

How," Swara (East African Wildlife Society) 32, no. 2 (2009): 36-37.

3. Interview with Fred Nelson, found on March 14, 2013, at
www.iucn.org/about/union/commissions/sustainable_use_and_livelihoods_specialist_group/sulinews/issue_2/sn2_frednelson.cfm

protecting endangered Species with private-property rights
appliCatiOnS in eCOnOMiCS

AD Hanekom/Shutterstock.com
iStockphoto.com/sorendls

9781337345866, Economics: Private and Public Choice, Fifteenth Edition, Gwartney/Stroup/Sobel/Macpherson - Cengage Learning. All rights reserved. No distribution allowed without express authorization. Distributed by Grand Canyon University.

Reference no: EM131224035

Questions Cloud

Considering opening another officeat a cost : Opti-Net has a Cost of Goods Sold (COGS) of 57%. They are considering opening another officeat a cost of $22,000 per month. If they have an average revenue of $70 per sale and they only sellone in five customers, what would be the required sales..
What is the equilibrium price : Using demand and supply curves, show the effect of each of the following on the market for cigarettes: A cure for lung cancer is found. What is the equilibrium price?
Describe each of the accounting systems : Describe each of the accounting systems.  Give an example of a company or industry that might use each system and explain why they use it. Format your submission consistent with APA guidelines.
Discuss the role of sentencing philosophies in administering : Compose an essay of 500 words where you discuss the role of sentencing philosophies in administering punishment by correctional agencies. As part of your discussion identify how the evolution of sentencing philosophies has impacted correctional ag..
How scarcity is affected by private property rights in case : To understand why many wild animals are scarce we need to look at scarcity in the context of private property. Explain how scarcity is affected by private property rights in the case study.
Discuss economic benefits of debt relief for these countries : There is currently a worldwide campaign to reduce the foreign debt of the least-developed countries. Discuss the economic benefits of debt relief for these countries.
Company equity multiplier-debt ratio and roe : Norton Company has a debt-to-equity ratio of 1.18, ROA of 12.23 percent, and total equity of $1,484,000. What are the company's equity multiplier, debt ratio, and ROE? (Roundanswers to 2 decimal places, e.g. 12.55 or 12.55%.)
What is the value of net domestic product : What is the value of GDP? What is the value of net domestic product? What is the value of net investment? What is the value of net exports? Calculate the final market value of the flour.
How does an animal behavior aid survival and reproduction : Explain why asexually reproducing organisms are generally found in environments that do not change very much through time, while sexually reproducing organisms are very successful in environments that change dramatically through time.

Reviews

Write a Review

Microeconomics Questions & Answers

  At the profit-maximizing output level

At the profit-maximizing output level you reported in question 3, is the El Dorado Star making the greatest possible amount of TOTAL REVENUE? Is this what you expected? Explain BRIEFLY

  Determine the values of k for which the fixed points

Determine the values of k for which the fixed points in the unit interval for the logistic family kx(1 - x) with k > 0 are attracting, repelling, or neutral.

  If no fiscal policy changes are made

If no fiscal policy changes are made, suppose the current aggregate demand curve will increase horizontally by $1,000 billion and cause inflation. If the marginal propensity to consume is 0.75, federal policymakers could follow Keynesian economics an..

  Lindenwood valley farmers is a missouri business that

lindenwood valley farmers is a missouri business that raises ducks for slaughter. among the products produced by

  Assume the following data describe the gasoline market

assume the following data describe the gasoline market price per gallon 2.00 2.25 2.50 2.75 3.00 3.25 3.50 quantity

  What amount will be in the account in 20 years

Future value. Sandra wants to deposit $100 each year for her son. If she places it in a savings account that pays 5%, what amount will be in the account in 20 years?

  What is the fisher hypothesis

Look at the figure in the Focus box on Latin America. Note that the line drawn through the scatter of points does not go through the origin. Does the Fisher effect suggest that it should go through the origin? Explain.

  How many worker allelectronics hire

What is the welfare loss in the labor market compared to the case where the engineer labor market is competitive?

  Prepare circular flow diagram - include government sector

A circular flow diagram that includes the government sector. For this part of your paper, you should include a description of the roles that each participant plays in the economy and how the different sectors interact in the markets.

  Could this consumer continue to stay in his current house

In the absence of any policy intervention, will this consumer consume more or less in non-housing consumption given the current crisis?

  What does this mean about real gdp growth rate for economy

what are the problems with inflation itself? be specific. is the real inflation that consumers have in their real-life

  To improve cost function for better understand

If Alisha Maintenance manufacturing then how would Alisha's management improve its cost function to better understand their past maintenance costs and predict future maintenance costs.

Free Assignment Quote

Assured A++ Grade

Get guaranteed satisfaction & time on delivery in every assignment order you paid with us! We ensure premium quality solution document along with free turntin report!

All rights reserved! Copyrights ©2019-2020 ExpertsMind IT Educational Pvt Ltd