Conceptualising the economics of plant health protection against invasive pests

Threats to animal and plant health by invading organisms are increasing due to trade liberalisation and increased movement of goods and people. This paper conceptualises an economic approach to protecting plant health against invasive organisms, specifically addressing a multidisciplinary audience i...

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Main Authors: J. HEIKKILÄ, J. PELTOLA
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Scientific Agricultural Society of Finland 2008-12-01
Series:Agricultural and Food Science
Online Access:https://journal.fi/afs/article/view/5743
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spelling doaj-ead8d2c5a4eb4a04a41f62014cc292ef2020-11-24T23:36:23ZengScientific Agricultural Society of FinlandAgricultural and Food Science1459-60671795-18952008-12-01122 Conceptualising the economics of plant health protection against invasive pestsJ. HEIKKILÄJ. PELTOLAThreats to animal and plant health by invading organisms are increasing due to trade liberalisation and increased movement of goods and people. This paper conceptualises an economic approach to protecting plant health against invasive organisms, specifically addressing a multidisciplinary audience involved in plant health research and in governmental policy-making process. We discuss the conceptual framework and present some generally available management options. We also build a basic model dealing with pre-emptive and reactive control, followed by a numerical illustration to the case of Colorado potato beetle in Finland. The analysis undertaken supports the notion that pre-emptive control is a viable strategy. Reactive control should be considered only if very low invasion magnitude combines with a low level of damage. However, the strategy choice implies also distributional impacts that warrant attention. The analysis results in a solution for a given set of numbers only. Uncertainty is incorporated through sensitivity analysis. The approach presented demonstrates the basic economic thinking behind the issue, and the concepts described allow further development of more sophisticated forms of analysis.;https://journal.fi/afs/article/view/5743
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author J. HEIKKILÄ
J. PELTOLA
spellingShingle J. HEIKKILÄ
J. PELTOLA
Conceptualising the economics of plant health protection against invasive pests
Agricultural and Food Science
author_facet J. HEIKKILÄ
J. PELTOLA
author_sort J. HEIKKILÄ
title Conceptualising the economics of plant health protection against invasive pests
title_short Conceptualising the economics of plant health protection against invasive pests
title_full Conceptualising the economics of plant health protection against invasive pests
title_fullStr Conceptualising the economics of plant health protection against invasive pests
title_full_unstemmed Conceptualising the economics of plant health protection against invasive pests
title_sort conceptualising the economics of plant health protection against invasive pests
publisher Scientific Agricultural Society of Finland
series Agricultural and Food Science
issn 1459-6067
1795-1895
publishDate 2008-12-01
description Threats to animal and plant health by invading organisms are increasing due to trade liberalisation and increased movement of goods and people. This paper conceptualises an economic approach to protecting plant health against invasive organisms, specifically addressing a multidisciplinary audience involved in plant health research and in governmental policy-making process. We discuss the conceptual framework and present some generally available management options. We also build a basic model dealing with pre-emptive and reactive control, followed by a numerical illustration to the case of Colorado potato beetle in Finland. The analysis undertaken supports the notion that pre-emptive control is a viable strategy. Reactive control should be considered only if very low invasion magnitude combines with a low level of damage. However, the strategy choice implies also distributional impacts that warrant attention. The analysis results in a solution for a given set of numbers only. Uncertainty is incorporated through sensitivity analysis. The approach presented demonstrates the basic economic thinking behind the issue, and the concepts described allow further development of more sophisticated forms of analysis.;
url https://journal.fi/afs/article/view/5743
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AT jpeltola conceptualisingtheeconomicsofplanthealthprotectionagainstinvasivepests
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