动物疾病发病率与赔偿根除计划

Animal disease incidence and indemnity eradication programs

Agricultural Economics · 2000
被引 9
人大 A-

中文导读

研究了政府赔偿计划在控制动物疾病传播中的效果,发现当农民难以识别患病动物时,赔偿价格水平显著影响计划成效,以美国羊痒病根除计划为例验证了价格弹性。

Abstract

There are many options for controlling the spread of animal diseases. Some diseases have been treated as public sector problems and many nations have tried to control disease spread by purchasing sick animals from farmers. Government agencies have purchased breeding stock that might transmit diseases. Government agencies have purchased animals that might otherwise have gone to the slaughterhouse, thereby keeping pathogens out of the food supply. Our hypothesis is that when it is not immediately obvious to farmers or private sector buyers which animals carry or transmit diseases, a government indemnity program's success is not assured. Instead, disease control depends on farmers' ability to respond to the relative prices they face. We examine the incentives created by prices (indemnity payment levels) government agencies choose. The scrapie indemnity eradication program in the United States (1952–1992) provides a natural laboratory for measuring the responsiveness to government-set prices. We show that government-set prices played a major role in determining the program's outcome: the supply of infected animals was price elastic. We argue that short-run movements in relative prices and the number of infected animals offer a practical method for assessing program effectiveness.

动物疾病发病率政府赔偿计划价格弹性羊痒病根除