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Abstract
One of the objectives for the European Horizon 2021–2027 is completely eliminating harmful fishery subsidies. Spain was the country that received the greatest amount of the previous European Marine Fishery Funds framed within EU horizon-2020. We explore the potential impacts of eliminating these harmful subsidies in the sectors related to marine resources in Spain. We address it with the novelty of applying an input–output model, disaggregating marine resource activities into three sectors (fishing, aquaculture and seafood processing sector). Our results show that the subtraction of these harmful subsidies will entail significant reductions in the valueadded of the analysed sectors, which will impact their supply and demand of inputs affecting the rest of the sectors of the economy. It will affect the final demand for their outputs and the sectors linked to them. We derive policy recommendations to smooth the transition to a fishery-related industry without harmful subsidies.
Original language | English |
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Article number | 105661 |
Pages (from-to) | 1 |
Number of pages | 17 |
Journal | Marine Policy |
Volume | 153 |
DOIs | |
Publication status | Published - 1 Jul 2023 |
Keywords
- European Marine Fishery Funds
- Harmful subsidies
- Input–output analysis
- Marine resource conservation
- Overfishing
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ECONOMIC ACTIVITY, CLIMATE CHANGE AND ENVIRONMENTAL POLICIES
Padilla Rosa, E., Alcantara Escolano, V., Van Den Bergh, J. C. J. M., Roca Jusmet, J., Serrano Gutiérrez, M., Steenge, A., Silvi, M. T., Albrecht, T., Dilek, G., Lioussis, M., Toro, F., Parajuá, N. & Bordón Lesme, M. A.
1/09/22 → 31/08/25
Project: Research Projects and Other Grants