Ferraro, Paul J.Simpson, R. David2016-04-192016-04-192002Presented at "Direct Payments as an Alternative Approach to Conservation Investment: A Symposium at the 16th Annual Meetings of the Society for Conservation Biology," Canterbury, England, 15 July 20022474_Ferraro2002_Economics_of_conservation_in.ppthttp://hdl.handle.net/10919/66974International donors invest billions of dollars to conserve ecosystems in low-income nations. An emerging debate rages among academics and practitioners as to the most effective forms of conservation investment. Among the more popular initiatives to achieve this objective is the use of development interventions in the peripheral areas of endangered ecosystems. Such interventions indirectly provide desirable ecosystem services through two mechanisms: (1) by re-directing labor and capital away from activities that degrade ecosystems (e.g., agricultural intensification); and (2) by encouraging commercial activities that supply ecosystem services as joint products (e.g., ecotourism). We contrast this dominant approach with an approach that pays for ecosystem protection directly. Based on theoretical and empirical analyses, we argue that investments aimed at making payments that are conditional on conservation performance are likely to be far more cost-effective than the currently popular indirect approaches to conservation investment. Although direct payment initiatives have imposing institutional requirements, we argue that all conservation initiatives face similar challenges. An empirical example from Africa illustrates the substantial cost savings that can be realized by direct payment initiatives.application/vnd.ms-powerpointen-USIn CopyrightPayments for environmental servicesConservation strategyConservationConservation incentivesConservation investmentsEcosystem protectionDirect paymentsEcosystem Farm/Enterprise ScaleThe economics of conservation investmentsGetting what you paid for: The economics of conservation investmentsPresentation