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Financial Support to Fisheries

Implications for Sustainable Development

image of Financial Support to Fisheries

OECD governments pay out around USD 6 billion a year to support the fisheries sector. Some of this expenditure is provided to help ensure the effective management of fisheries through the provision of research, administrative and enforcement services. However, its effects on economic profitability and resource sustainability are open to debate. Such support has often been linked to over-fishing and over-capitalisation, and its reform may lead to improved economic, environmental and social outcomes. This report analyses the impacts of such transfers from a sustainable development perspective by addressing the economic, environmental and social dimensions of financial transfers. Through this innovative focus, this study will deepen policy makers’ understanding of the complex issues at play in the fisheries sector — a sector that is characterised by ongoing concerns regarding economic profitability, community resilience, and resource sustainability.

English Also available in: French

Fisheries Subsidies in Norway

Fisheries subsidies in Norway have a long and interesting history. In the first years after the Second World War the fisheries of Norway were quite profitable, and reserve funds were accumulated through levies on exports of fish. After a few years the fishing industry began to lag behind other industries in terms of productivity, and the funds were used to support declining incomes in the industry.

English Also available in: French

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