Weak states and the commons: Fisheries and economic development in the Gaspé Peninsula circa 1830

The inefficiencies of common property fisheries are well-known to economists. To avoid over-exploitation, they propose multiple forms of government solution such as taxes, quotas and the enforcement of property rights regimes designed to avoid over-harvesting. But can efficient arrangements also exi...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Vincent Geloso, Félix Foucher-Paquin
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2023-01-01
Series:Journal of Government and Economics
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2667319323000149
_version_ 1827875714433548288
author Vincent Geloso
Félix Foucher-Paquin
author_facet Vincent Geloso
Félix Foucher-Paquin
author_sort Vincent Geloso
collection DOAJ
description The inefficiencies of common property fisheries are well-known to economists. To avoid over-exploitation, they propose multiple forms of government solution such as taxes, quotas and the enforcement of property rights regimes designed to avoid over-harvesting. But can efficient arrangements also exist under statelessness, or in the presence of weak states? One such example is the Gaspé Peninsula (in the Canadian province of Quebec) during the first half of the nineteenth century. There, a single firm (the Charles Robin Company) came to dominate the market and was able to restrict entry effectively. In this paper, we explain that it was able to do so by reducing the prices on imported goods that it would give to local fishermen in exchange for a part of their catch. This had the effect of deterring fishermen from contracting with other merchants as well as deterring other merchants from entering the market. It also made the region richer than most regions of Canada at the time, contrary to what historians have depicted. We take this as an example of the ability to deal with commons problems in the presence of weak states.
first_indexed 2024-03-12T17:11:54Z
format Article
id doaj.art-fe72651c374a4ef4a9351216502740b7
institution Directory Open Access Journal
issn 2667-3193
language English
last_indexed 2024-03-12T17:11:54Z
publishDate 2023-01-01
publisher Elsevier
record_format Article
series Journal of Government and Economics
spelling doaj.art-fe72651c374a4ef4a9351216502740b72023-08-06T04:38:36ZengElsevierJournal of Government and Economics2667-31932023-01-0110100071Weak states and the commons: Fisheries and economic development in the Gaspé Peninsula circa 1830Vincent Geloso0Félix Foucher-Paquin1George Mason University, United States of America; Corresponding author.Desjardins Credit Union, CanadaThe inefficiencies of common property fisheries are well-known to economists. To avoid over-exploitation, they propose multiple forms of government solution such as taxes, quotas and the enforcement of property rights regimes designed to avoid over-harvesting. But can efficient arrangements also exist under statelessness, or in the presence of weak states? One such example is the Gaspé Peninsula (in the Canadian province of Quebec) during the first half of the nineteenth century. There, a single firm (the Charles Robin Company) came to dominate the market and was able to restrict entry effectively. In this paper, we explain that it was able to do so by reducing the prices on imported goods that it would give to local fishermen in exchange for a part of their catch. This had the effect of deterring fishermen from contracting with other merchants as well as deterring other merchants from entering the market. It also made the region richer than most regions of Canada at the time, contrary to what historians have depicted. We take this as an example of the ability to deal with commons problems in the presence of weak states.http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2667319323000149Common access resourceFisheriesCanadian economic historyMonopoly
spellingShingle Vincent Geloso
Félix Foucher-Paquin
Weak states and the commons: Fisheries and economic development in the Gaspé Peninsula circa 1830
Journal of Government and Economics
Common access resource
Fisheries
Canadian economic history
Monopoly
title Weak states and the commons: Fisheries and economic development in the Gaspé Peninsula circa 1830
title_full Weak states and the commons: Fisheries and economic development in the Gaspé Peninsula circa 1830
title_fullStr Weak states and the commons: Fisheries and economic development in the Gaspé Peninsula circa 1830
title_full_unstemmed Weak states and the commons: Fisheries and economic development in the Gaspé Peninsula circa 1830
title_short Weak states and the commons: Fisheries and economic development in the Gaspé Peninsula circa 1830
title_sort weak states and the commons fisheries and economic development in the gaspe peninsula circa 1830
topic Common access resource
Fisheries
Canadian economic history
Monopoly
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2667319323000149
work_keys_str_mv AT vincentgeloso weakstatesandthecommonsfisheriesandeconomicdevelopmentinthegaspepeninsulacirca1830
AT felixfoucherpaquin weakstatesandthecommonsfisheriesandeconomicdevelopmentinthegaspepeninsulacirca1830