The cost-effectiveness of conservation payments

Files

TR Number

Date

2002

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Madison, Wis.: University of Wisconsin Press

Abstract

International donors invest billions of dollars to conserve ecosystems in low-income nations. The most common investments aim to encourage commercial activities, such as ecotourism, that indirectly generate ecosystem protection as a joint product. We demonstrate that paying for ecosystem protection directly can be far more cost-effective. Although direct-payment initiatives have imposing institutional requirements, we argue that all conservation initiatives face similar challenges. Thus conservation practitioners would be well advised to implement the first-best direct-payment approach, rather than a second-best policy option. An empirical example illustrates the spectacular cost savings that can be realized by direct-payment initiatives.

Description

Keywords

Social impacts, Humid zones, Ecosystem, Semiarid zones, Sustainable development, Payments for environmental services, Environmental impacts, Enterprise types, Ecotourism, Natural resource-based enterprise, Conservation strategy, Conservation, Economic impacts, Parks, Natural resource management, Low-income nations, Direct payments, Cost savings, Ecosystem Farm/Enterprise Scale Governance

Citation

Land Economics 78(3): 339-353