Stranded Capital in Fisheries : Stranded Capital in Fisheries Jim Wilen
Department of Agric. & Resource Economics University of California, Davis
March 2007
Questions : Questions What is stranded capital?
How has stranded capital been treated in other policy settings?
What are the potential effects on processors of IFQs?
When are stranded costs likely to be significant?
What are the arguments for considering these effects?
How should we measure stranded capital?
What mechanisms can be used to address impacts?
Stranded Capital: the Policy Context : Stranded Capital: the Policy Context Deregulation wave of 1980s: trucking, airlines, gas production, electricity
Electricity Deregulation of 1990s
Prices deregulated--competitive market for power
Inefficient investments no longer guaranteed ROR (particularly high capital cost nuclear plants)
Some long term contracts above market prices (green power, co-gen, small scale hydro)
Utilities argued: investments/contracts induced by old regulations and unprofitable under new deregulated policy arena were “stranded”
Stranded Capital: the Compensation Arguments : Stranded Capital: the Compensation Arguments
Implicit “regulatory compact” between firms and regulators
Failure to ensure rate of return is breach of implicit regulatory compact
Without compensation, utility investments may be seen as more risky, cost of capital and prices to consumers may rise, reducing benefits of deregulations
Unfair to investors to reduce value of shares by regulatory action---a “takings”
Responses to Stranded Capital Compensation Arguments : Responses to Stranded Capital Compensation Arguments
Regulatory response
Compensation was not an issue in trucking, airlines, banking, and natural gas deregulation
Large size of stranded capital claims in electricity; ongoing debate over compensation is holding up some deregulation
Legal responses
Courts have not supported notion of breach of “regulatory compact”
Courts have not upheld idea that failure to compensate is a “takings”
Economists’ responses
Risk of deregulation and its impact already taken into account in capital investment decision, so stranded capital has already been compensated
Compensation a distributional decision; unlikely to promote efficiency
My take
We should at least attempt to measure all benefits/costs of regulatory changes including, if important, stranded capital losses
Stranded Capital in Fisheries : Stranded Capital in Fisheries
Notion first appeared in Alaska crab rationalization debates
Backdrop: halibut experience in BC and Alaska
Pre ITQ: derby, compressed season, frozen product, concentrated processing, isolated processor locations
Post ITQs: fresh product, longer season, slower pace, new markets and new buyers,niche handlers
Argument: crab processors needed protection
Stranded capital will become worthless
Owners of such capital will suffer losses during transition
Alaska crab rationalization
Intricate scheme of processor IPQs, locked-in delivery options
No attempt to actually measure potential stranded capital
Preconditions for Stranded Capital to be a Significant Problem : Preconditions for Stranded Capital to be a Significant Problem
Major change in product form that can be ascribed specifically to change in regulations
Contributing economic factors
Highly compressed derby fishery
Highly competitive processing sector
Technological factors
Processing is capital intensive
Capital is specialized to one species
Capital is specialized to one product
Likely Impacts of IFQs on West Coast Groundfish Processors : Likely Impacts of IFQs on West Coast Groundfish Processors Non-whiting Groundfish
Model: BC groundfish IFQ program vs. BC halibut
Value added opportunities for incumbents
More uniform harvesting--elimination of surges
More allocation to higher valued fresh markets
Market deepening--uniform supply, reliability, product specs
Continued use of hand fillet processing
Landings coordination with harvesters
Moderate entry of new handlers--niche development, market broadening, diffused community handling
Inshore Whiting
Model: Alaska pollock fishery
Slower paced and longer fishery
Optimized raw fish condition
More product recovery
Increased product form flexibility
Stranded Capital in the Pacific Coast Groundfish Fishery? : Stranded Capital in the Pacific Coast Groundfish Fishery?
Groundfish: conditions differ from Alaskan halibut and crab fisheries
Trip limits have been implemented to prevent derby conditions
Product flow spread over season with only small surges
Delivery agreements and coordination in place
Processing plants not isolated from markets and transportation network
Not likely to be a regulation-induced shift in the center of fishing activities
Fishing, processing and marketing in close proximity
Markets developed for diversity of products already
Highly concentrated processing sector
Stranded Capital in the Pacific Coast Whiting Fishery? : Stranded Capital in the Pacific Coast Whiting Fishery?
Some conditions similar to pre-AFA Alaskan inshore pollock:
Race to fish
Conditions differ in other ways:
Shoreside processing more highly concentrated
Mixed product forms already developed
Strong markets for fillets, weakening surimi markets
Surimi product quality differences
Processing plants not isolated from markets and transportation network
Fishing, processing and marketing in close proximity
Compensating Stranded Processor Capital: for and against : Compensating Stranded Processor Capital: for and against
Arguments for: failing to compensate is unfair
Causes capital value losses to owners
Arguments against: compensating causes future inefficiencies
Sunk capital already compensated in original investment
IFQ compensation gives processors market power; increases bargaining strength vis a vis harvesters
Compensation gives incumbents advantage over prospective entrants
freezes existing patterns of harvesting, marketing, products
Compensation encourages future process holdup
Measuring Stranded Capital Costs : Measuring Stranded Capital Costs
Distinction between costs of capital and value of capital
Value of capital depends upon its next best alternative use
Land and warehouse space
Storage space
Offloading, pumps, chilling tanks
Flash freezing
Filleting/surimi machine
Attributing stranded costs
Policy relevant stranded capital
Apportioning shared capital
Key question: exactly what capital becomes “worthless” as result of regulatory change?
Mechanisms for Compensating Stranded Capital Costs : Mechanisms for Compensating Stranded Capital Costs
Granting permanent IFQ allocations to processors
Lump sum compensation
Grants
Loan and landings tax
Loan and transfer tax on IFQ transactions
Processing/harvester lock-in
landings requirements (sliding, sunset)
Fractional set-aside of IFQ
Auctioned to generate compensation fund (sliding, sunset)
Important Administrative Process Issues : Important Administrative Process Issues
Importance of measurement
Burden of proof: tying to stranded capital value
Codification of definitions/accounting procedures
Setting a threshold; transactions costs
Assessing spillovers
Altering power balance between harvesters and processors
Creating incumbent advantages
precedent
One time resolution vs. permanent distortion
Summary : Summary Little precedent for compensating stranded costs
However, good policy making requires informed decisions, including understanding potential losses
The preconditions to generate significant stranded costs in Pacific Coast non-whiting groundfish fishery do not seem present
Possibly an argument for whiting but value of stranded capital not likely to be high
Burden of proof should rest with industry to make explicit estimate of verifiable stranded capital losses
Bad policy to make a “guess” about numbers, and then lock in a permanent distortion of IFQ system
Currently suggested fixes seem implausibly high--eg 25% IFQ allocation implies 75 million dollar capital losses
What is the Real Problem Here? : What is the Real Problem Here? Is the issue really stranded capital? Or is it:
Capturing the rents--groundfish
30,000 MT x 2200=66,000,000 lbs
BC mixed prices: 0.25 lease; 3.00 sale
$16,500,000 lease market
$198,000,000 asset value
Rent Estimates--whiting
85,000 MTx2200=187,000,000 lbs
Alaska prices (adj): 0.04 lease; 0.48 sale
$7,500,000 lease market
$90,000,000 asset value
Bargaining Power: processors vs. harvesters
Reducing competition for incumbents