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#985335 - 02/12/18 02:27 PM Economic value of sport fishing
bushbear Offline
River Nutrients

Registered: 08/26/02
Posts: 4709
Loc: Sequim

The following article comes out of the CCA Newsletter

NOAA Finally Getting It Right
Agency’s fisheries economics report more accurately reflects reality, to the dismay of some.

Posted on November 14, 2017 by Brad Gentner, President, Gentner Consulting Group LLC



An editorial appeared in National Fisherman magazine recently entitled, “NOAA report reaches to compound the interest and rewards of sport fishing,” in which the author lamented NOAA’s annual fisheries economics report as “a paean to recreational fisheries.” National Fisherman is regarded as the publication for and about industrial fishing, and it took issue with the NOAA report for showing, at long last, that in 2016 recreational marine fisheries contributed $36 billion, in valued added, to the national economy each year while commercial fisheries landed $5.3 billion worth of product and contributed $46.7 billion in value added through the whole supply chain.

This is perhaps the closest to an apples-to-apples comparison the agency has ever done, and even though National Fisherman might disagree, the numbers are still not truly indicative of the disparity between the two sectors. If you remove imports and take out the species anglers don’t even fish for, commercial value added shrinks to $8.3 billion.

As the saying goes, we've come a long way.

Recreational fisheries have been marginalized in the national discourse for a long time and the recreational sector has lobbied NOAA hard in recent years to make sure the recreational sector’s true economic contributions are highlighted right alongside the commercial numbers in reports like this one. What the article doesn’t get right is the comparison is even less flattering to the commercial sector if you drill down into the estimates and actually examine the economics of the issue.

I served as a Senior Research Economist for the National Marine Fisheries Service (NMFS) for eight years and it was my job to construct the economic models and multipliers for both the commercial and recreational sectors. The $36 billion dollar recreational value added number is created using the same technique as the commercial value added number. I was the author of the value added table in the Fisheries of the United States (FUS) while I worked for NMFS, and I know that it uses the exact same methodology that all branches of the federal government use to estimate the economic activity generated by an industry. Value added, or contribution to GDP, is a time-tested tool that represents a scientifically agreed upon standard to represent economic activity and the importance of an industry. Both models are indeed “esoteric” economic impact models as derided by the National Fisherman.

While the National Fisherman editorial takes issue with the recreational figures as being too large, it ignores the fact that the value added estimate for commercial fisheries, $46.7 billion, in FUS contains imported seafood that does nothing to support the domestic seafood industry. The US imports 94 percent of the seafood it consumes and if you take out those imports from the value added figure, as is done in the 2015 FEUS publication, the multiplier estimate of value added from the harvester to the plate without imports drops by nearly half to $27.0 billion. Imported seafood supports things like shippers and warehouses and grocery stores, but it doesn’t quite get us to a true apples-to-apples comparison yet.

To get closer to making a true apples-to-apples comparison and to be completely intellectually honest, we have to return to FEUS in 2015. That’s where the recreational sector generates of $63.4 billion in total sales, including the multiplier effect. In that same year, the commercial sector, from the net to the plate and including only domestically harvested fish, generated $51.9 billion in total impact, including the multiplier effect. Only $13.9 billion of that is attributable to the commercial harvesting sector. The remainder is attributed to processors, dealers, wholesalers, distributors, super markets, fish markets and restaurants. Over half of that number, $26.1 billion, is attributed to the retail sector alone.

Honing the comparison down even further, only 30 percent of the value of commercial landings comes from fisheries shared by recreational anglers. This is a very conservative estimate of the commercial-only fisheries and that 30 percent figure is likely much lower. If you take shellfish, crab, lobster, mollusks, menhaden, Alaskan pollock, sablefish, scallop, industrial species, freshwater fish and shrimp out of that equation, commercial landed value drops 70 percent.

Looked at this way, the recreational sector is generating $63.4 billion in economic activity while the commercial harvesting sector is generating $4.3 billion in economic activity at the harvester level and the entire seafood sector, from the net to the plate, is generating $15.9 billion in total economic activity and only $8.3 billion in value added across those species that recreational anglers target.

The National Fisherman was also quick to drag out that old saw that recreational expenditures on food should not be included unless they wouldn’t have eaten anything if they stayed home instead of going fishing. That is completely right, but it fails to take into account that the same thing applies to the commercial supply chain. The economic impact estimates they cite and those detailed above include meals fed to crews aboard commercial fishing vessels. Additionally, NMFS includes the entire supply chain for seafood in their economic impact estimates of the commercial sector even when consumers could simply buy chicken instead.

If National Fisherman wants only the multiplier effects of goods that do not have substitutes for consumers, their economic importance numbers shrink even more. Some might not like the agreed standard for economic impact analysis, but the inclusion of impacts regardless of the availability of substitute activities or substitute protein sources is the scientific standard.

No matter how you slice it, the recreational sector has a large and important economic footprint in this country and it is entirely appropriate that it is finally being recognized correctly alongside that of the commercial sector.

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#985337 - 02/12/18 03:09 PM Re: Economic value of sport fishing [Re: bushbear]
ned Offline
Spawner

Registered: 06/09/07
Posts: 666
Loc: MA 5, 9, 10
".... it is entirely appropriate that it is finally being recognized correctly alongside that of the commercial sector.

Recognized by us, since we by licenses, gas bait, rods electronics, etc...

Hate to bring the tempo down, but not recognized by our congressional reps, local comissioners, governor, and those that are supposed to be guiding the state economy, and economic interests of the state's citizens.

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#985359 - 02/12/18 08:32 PM Re: Economic value of sport fishing [Re: bushbear]
DrifterWA Offline
River Nutrients

Registered: 04/25/00
Posts: 5077
Loc: East of Aberdeen, West of Mont...
I spent Friday and Saturday at the WDFW Commission meeting.....commercials mention the importance of $$$$$$ they bring to the communities. Two or three times, different NT people talked about how sportsmen spent very little in the Willapa fishery, say everything is purchased before they arrive to fish.....

I know lots of fishermen, that come to GH to fish Satsop, Wynoochee, Humptulips, and points North,,,,stop for bait, gas and then the $$$$$$ for the "turn around guys", just no one talks about it.
_________________________
"Worse day sport fishing, still better than the best day working"

"I thought growing older, would take longer"

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#985362 - 02/12/18 10:32 PM Re: Economic value of sport fishing [Re: bushbear]
eyeFISH Offline
Ornamental Rice Bowl

Registered: 11/24/03
Posts: 12767
Regardless of where the dollars are eventually dropped, the state economy as a whole still wins. The economic engine of rec fishing has the potential to roar... if only the allocation was finally based on the highest and best use of a limited public resource.

What those guys said at the meeting about spending habits may well be true of the day trippers, but lotsa folks camp in the area for a week or more, sometimes the whole season... spending their $$$ in local stores, gas stations, grocery stores, restaurants, and lodging.

That's how it works anytime I go on an extended fishing vacation.
_________________________
"Let every angler who loves to fish think what it would mean to him to find the fish were gone." (Zane Grey)

"If you don't kill them, they will spawn." (Carcassman)


The Keen Eye MD
Long Live the Kings!

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#985398 - 02/13/18 01:19 PM Re: Economic value of sport fishing [Re: bushbear]
FleaFlickr02 Offline
River Nutrients

Registered: 10/28/09
Posts: 3314
This will be news when policies change. Until then, it's only more preaching to the choir.

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#985411 - 02/13/18 05:05 PM Re: Economic value of sport fishing [Re: bushbear]
RUNnGUN Offline
Repeat Spawner

Registered: 12/06/07
Posts: 1385
Imagine that! NSIA and other organizations have been trying to educate the political electorate for years on the economic benefits of recreational sports fishing. Fallen on deaf ears.
_________________________
"Life moves pretty fast. If you don't stop and look around once in a while, you could miss it.” – Ferris Bueller.
Don't let the old man in!

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