A Revealed Preference Approach to Estimating Supply Curves for Ecosystem Services: Use of Auctions to Set Payments for Soil Erosion Control in Indonesia |
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Authors: | B. KELSEY JACK,BERIA LEIMONA&dagger § , PAUL J. FERRARO&Dagger |
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Affiliation: | Center for International Development, Kennedy School of Government, Harvard University, 79 JFK Street, Cambridge, MA 02138-5801, U.S.A.;ICRAF Southeast Asia Regional Office Jl. CIFOR, Situ Gede, Sindang Barang, Bogor 16001, Indonesia;Department of Economics, Andrew Young School of Policy Studies, Georgia State University, 14 Marietta Street NW, Atlanta, GA 30302-3992, U.S.A. |
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Abstract: | Abstract: To supply ecosystem services, private landholders incur costs. Knowledge of these costs is critical for the design of conservation-payment programs. Estimating these costs accurately is difficult because the minimum acceptable payment to a potential supplier is private information. We describe how an auction of payment contracts can be designed to elicit this information during the design phase of a conservation-payment program. With an estimate of the ecosystem-service supply curve from a pilot auction, conservation planners can explore the financial, ecological, and socioeconomic consequences of alternative scaled-up programs. We demonstrate the potential of our approach in Indonesia, where soil erosion on coffee farms generates downstream ecological and economic costs. Bid data from a small-scale, uniform-price auction for soil-conservation contracts allowed estimates of the costs of a scaled-up program, the gain from integrating biophysical and economic data to target contracts, and the trade-offs between poverty alleviation and supply of ecosystem services. Our study illustrates an auction-based approach to revealing private information about the costs of supplying ecosystem services. Such information can improve the design of programs devised to protect and enhance ecosystem services. |
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Keywords: | conservation auction conservation planning payments for ecosystem services poverty alleviation program design revealed preferences supply curves |
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