Abstract

The maintenance of livestock health depends on the combined actions of many different actors, both within and across different regulatory frameworks. Prior work recognised that private risk management choices have the ability to reduce the spread of infection to trading partners. We evaluate the efficiency of farmers’ alternative biosecurity choices in terms of their own-benefits from unilateral strategies and quantify the impact they may have in filtering the disease externality of trade. We use bovine viral diarrhoea (BVD) in England and Scotland as a case study, since this provides an example of a situation where contrasting strategies for BVD management occur between selling and purchasing farms. We use an agent-based bioeconomic model to assess the payoff dependence of farmers connected by trade but using different BVD management strategies. We compare three disease management actions: test-cull, test-cull with vaccination and vaccination alone. For a two-farm trading situation, all actions carried out by the selling farm provide substantial benefits to the purchasing farm in terms of disease avoided, with the greatest benefit resulting from test-culling with vaccination on the selling farm. Likewise, unilateral disease strategies by purchasers can be effective in reducing disease risks created through trade. We conclude that regulation needs to balance the trade-off between private gains from those bearing the disease management costs and the positive spillover effects on others.

Highlights

  • Globalisation has led to increased movement of goods and commodities, including livestock and livestock products (Knobler et al 2006)

  • Consistent with previous work, we demonstrate that diseases can cause externalities to trading partner in a way similar to biological pollution (Daszak et al 2000)

  • We show that the management strategy that is best for the seller does not necessarily correspond to the strategy that best reduces the disease harm to the purchaser

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Summary

Introduction

Globalisation has led to increased movement of goods and commodities, including livestock and livestock products (Knobler et al 2006). A livestock producer’s investment in biosecurity measures can reduce disease risk and potential damages for neighbours and trading partners, leading to positive externalities for these other parties and the potential for free-riding on biosecurity (Hennessy and Wolf 2015). This is known as a filterable externality because a producer’s biosecurity choices filter the risk of disease infection and damages to others (Shogren and Crocker 1991; Reeling and Horan 2015, 2017). Reeling and Horan (2015) have shown that where individual producers have a greater ability to secure the benefits from private actions to control their own risk, greater levels of biosecurity strategic relationships among producers and improved overall biosecurity are more likely to emerge

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