Enforcement and inequality in collective PES to reduce tropical deforestation: Effectiveness, efficiency and equity implications

被引:9
|
作者
Naime, Julia [1 ,4 ]
Angelsen, Arild [1 ,4 ]
Molina-Garzon, Adriana [2 ,4 ]
Carrilho, Caue D. [3 ,4 ]
Selviana, Vivi [4 ]
Demarchi, Gabriela [4 ,5 ]
Duchelle, Amy E. [4 ]
Martius, Christopher [6 ]
机构
[1] Norwegian Univ Life Sci NMBU, Sch Econ & Business, POB 5003, N-1432 As, Norway
[2] Univ Colorado Boulder, Inst Behav Sci, Dept Polit Sci, Boulder, CO USA
[3] Univ Sao Paulo, Sao Paulo, SP, Brazil
[4] Ctr Int Forestry Res CIFOR, Bogor, Indonesia
[5] French Natl Res Inst Agr Food & Environm INRAE, Montpellier, France
[6] Ctr Int Forestry Res CIFOR Germany gGmbH, Charles-Degaulle Str 5, D-53113 Bonn, Germany
关键词
Payment for Ecosystem Services; Climate change; Tropical deforestation; Common -pool resources; Framed Field Experiments; PUBLIC GOOD GAMES; ENVIRONMENTAL SERVICES; ECOSYSTEM SERVICES; SELF-GOVERNANCE; FOREST COMMONS; VOLUNTARY CONTRIBUTIONS; FISHING COMMUNITIES; NORMATIVE CONFLICT; PEER PUNISHMENT; REDD PLUS;
D O I
10.1016/j.gloenvcha.2022.102520
中图分类号
X [环境科学、安全科学];
学科分类号
08 ; 0830 ;
摘要
Collective Payments for Ecosystem Services (PES), where forest users receive compensation conditional on group rather than individual performance, are an increasingly used policy instrument to reduce tropical deforestation. However, implementing effective, (cost) efficient and equitable (3E) collective PES is challenging because in-dividuals have an incentive to free ride on others' conservation actions. Few comparative studies exist on how different enforcement strategies can improve collective PES performance. We conducted a framed field experi-ment in Brazil, Indonesia and Peru to evaluate how three different strategies to contain the local free-rider problem perform in terms of the 3Es: (i) Public monitoring of individual deforestation, (ii) internal, peer-to-peer sanctions (Community enforcement) and (iii) external sanctions (Government enforcement). We also examined how inequality in wealth, framed as differences in deforestation capacity, affects policy performance. We find that introducing individual level sanctions can improve the effectiveness, efficiency and equity of col-lective PES, but there is no silver bullet that consistently improves all 3Es across country sites. Public monitoring reduced deforestation and improved the equity of the program in sites with stronger history of collective action. External sanctions provided the strongest and most robust improvement in the 3Es. While internal, peer enforcement can significantly reduce free riding, it does not improve the program's efficiency, and thus par-ticipants' earnings. The sanctioning mechanisms failed to systematically improve the equitable distribution of benefits due to the ineffectiveness of punishments to target the largest free-riders. Inequality in wealth increased group deforestation and reduced the efficiency of Community enforcement in Indonesia but had no effect in the other two country sites. Factors explaining differences across country sites include the history of collective action and land tenure systems.
引用
收藏
页数:13
相关论文
共 6 条
  • [1] Modelling the effectiveness of enforcement strategies for avoiding tropical deforestation in Kerinci Seblat National Park, Sumatra
    Linkie, Matthew
    Rood, Ente
    Smith, Robert J.
    [J]. BIODIVERSITY AND CONSERVATION, 2010, 19 (04) : 973 - 984
  • [2] Modelling the effectiveness of enforcement strategies for avoiding tropical deforestation in Kerinci Seblat National Park, Sumatra
    Matthew Linkie
    Ente Rood
    Robert J. Smith
    [J]. Biodiversity and Conservation, 2010, 19 : 973 - 984
  • [3] Equity matters for the efficiency and effectiveness in Reducing Emissions from Deforestation and Degradation-plus
    Sheng, Jichuan
    Zhang, Ruzhu
    [J]. ENVIRONMENT DEVELOPMENT AND SUSTAINABILITY, 2024, 26 (06) : 14561 - 14582
  • [4] Equity matters for the efficiency and effectiveness in Reducing Emissions from Deforestation and Degradation-plus
    Sheng, Jichuan
    Zhang, Ruzhu
    [J]. ENVIRONMENT DEVELOPMENT AND SUSTAINABILITY, 2024, 26 (06) : 14561 - 14582
  • [5] Selecting Candidates for Lung Cancer Screening: Implications for Effectiveness, Efficiency, Equity, and Implementation
    Wiener, Renda Soylemez
    Gould, Michael K.
    [J]. ANNALS OF INTERNAL MEDICINE, 2023, 176 (03) : 413 - 414
  • [6] Unilateral climate policy design: Efficiency and equity implications of alternative instruments to reduce carbon leakage
    Boehringer, Christoph
    Carbone, Jared C.
    Rutherford, Thomas F.
    [J]. ENERGY ECONOMICS, 2012, 34 : S208 - S217