Migration and the Environment in the Galapagos: An Analysis of Economic and Policy Incentives Driving Migration, Potential Impacts from Migration Control, and Potential Policies to Reduce Migration Pressure

From 1974 through 1997 the Galapagos experienced very rapid population growth, around six per cent per year. Sustained at this level, the population would continue to double every 12 years. Increased population brings an increased risk of invasive introduced species, which endangers the fragile ecosystems. On 18 March 1998, a Special Law was passed to protect the Galapagos. This law severely limits migration to the islands. We discuss the environmental problems that motivated the law, describe the law, and discuss anecdotal evidence on its operation and potential to date. We then theoretically assess the implications of limiting migration and empirically assess the history and drivers of migration to Galapagos. In particular we discuss distorted incentives arising from subsidies and inadequate regulations that exacerbate migration pressure. Finally, we draw on our analysis to offer some short and longer term policy solutions and ideas on how existing capacity could be enhanced to implement them.

[1]  G. Brady Governing the Commons: The Evolution of Institutions for Collective Action , 1993 .

[2]  H. Herzog,et al.  Migration as spatial job-search: a survey of empirical findings. , 1993, Regional studies.

[3]  John Gibson Do Lower Expected Wage Benefits Explain Ethnic Gaps in Job-Related Training? Evidence from New Zealand , 2003 .

[4]  A. Mauchamp Threats from Alien Plant Species in the Galápagos Islands , 1997 .

[5]  P. Seabright Managing Local Commons: Theoretical Issues in Incentive Design , 1993 .

[6]  Arthur Grimes,et al.  Economic growth and the size & structure of government: Implications for New Zealand , 2003 .

[7]  David C. Maré,et al.  Cities and Skills , 1994, Journal of Labor Economics.

[8]  J. Taylor,et al.  The Economics of Ecotourism: A Galápagos Islands Economy‐Wide Perspective* , 2003, Economic Development and Cultural Change.

[9]  M. Greenwood,et al.  New directions in migration research , 1991, The Annals of regional science.

[10]  M. Camhi Industrial Fisheries Threaten Ecological Integrity of the Galapagos Islands , 1995 .

[11]  Charles M. Tiebout A Pure Theory of Local Expenditures , 1956, Journal of Political Economy.

[12]  Paul Krugman,et al.  Development, Geography, and Economic Theory , 1995 .

[13]  David C. Maré,et al.  Understanding New Zealand's Changing Income Distribution, 1983-1998: A Semi-Parametric Analysis , 2003 .

[14]  Viv Hall,et al.  Would Adopting the Us Dollar Have Led to Improved Inflation, Output and Trade Balances for New Zealand in the 1990s? , 2003 .

[15]  L. Sjaastad The Costs and Returns of Human Migration , 1962 .

[16]  Arthur Grimes,et al.  Housing and Economic Adjustment , 2003 .