Skip to content. | Skip to navigation

Personal tools
You are here: Home Environmental Economics Working Group U.S. Shrimp Market Integration
U.S. Shrimp Market Integration

U.S. Shrimp Market Integration

Recent supply shocks in the Gulf of Mexico—including hurricanes, the Deepwater Horizon oil spill, and the seasonal appearance of a large dead zone of low-oxygen water (hypoxia)—have raised concerns about the economic viability of the U.S. shrimp fishery. The ability for U.S. shrimpers to mediate supply shocks through increased prices hinges on the degree of market integration, both among shrimp of different sizes classes and between U.S. wild caught shrimp and imported farmed shrimp. We use detailed data on shrimp prices by size class and import prices to conduct a co-integration analysis of market integration in the shrimp industry. We find significant evidence of market integration, suggesting that the law of one price holds for this industry. Hence, in the face of a supply shocks, prices do not rise and instead imports of foreign farmed fish increase.

Author(s): Frank Asche, Lori S. Bennear, Atle Oglend, and Martin D. Smith

Published: November 2011

download: working paper (.pdf) >

Document Actions

     

     

  • Send this
  • Print this
breaking down barriers to
environmental progress
News    Events    Students    The Climate Post    Email Updates    RSS Feeds    Contact Us
  Ways to Give    Initiatives at Duke   Interdisciplinary Studies    Webmaster