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The Economic Value of Serengeti National Park in Tanzania and Implications for Adjacent Local Communities

This study presents a theme on the Economic Value of Serengeti National Park in Tanzania and Implications for Adjacent local communities. Firstly, we introduce and develop a bio-economic model to examine optimal combination of livestock production and wildlife conservation designed for the Serengeti...

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Main Author: Kibira, Gerald
Other Authors: Muchapondwa, Edwin
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: School of Economics 2022
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access_status_str Open Access
author Kibira, Gerald
author2 Muchapondwa, Edwin
author_browse Kibira, Gerald
Muchapondwa, Edwin
author_facet Muchapondwa, Edwin
Kibira, Gerald
author_sort Kibira, Gerald
collection Thesis
description This study presents a theme on the Economic Value of Serengeti National Park in Tanzania and Implications for Adjacent local communities. Firstly, we introduce and develop a bio-economic model to examine optimal combination of livestock production and wildlife conservation designed for the Serengeti ecosystem in Tanzania. The model incorporates a group of pastoralists who apportion a certain amount of effort between pastoralism and wildlife activities, that is, poaching which kills wildlife. The park agency has a significant role by defining the penalty to the community when its members are caught poaching. The Maasai who live adjacent to Serengeti National Park are found in Loliondo division, which is in Ngorongoro district. This paper articulates a bio-economic model for the two agents, optimizes the market problem for each agent, and relates the outcomes for the park agency and the Maasai community to the social planner's solution. The results show that the market outcomes are suboptimal than the social planner would recommend. Policy implications are that there should be a well-structured community organization that can have a significant impact on the growth of the wildlife stock, through obliging behavior. Such an organization might assist the community to realize a needed social outcome to protect the Serengeti's wildlife. In the second part of the thesis we argue that, National Parks are imperative to protect countries' natural inheritance. They are vital for conservation and offer valuable non-market recreation services to tourists. Benefits from these parks include employment creation, and export incomes. Because of low entrance fees, parks largely depend on fiscal transfers to fund their conservation activities. But dwindling government resources in Africa threaten the existence of national parks and other protected areas. Sustained effective conservation will have to be largely internally funded. Tourism is an important avenue of funds in these circumstances. We measure the nonmarket benefits of Serengeti National Park for international holidaymakers. We make use of data from an on-site survey at the park. We make use of individual Travel cost variables. Models accounting for all problems found in on-site surveys tend to outperform other models. Estimated consumer surplus is large, given the usually low entrance fees. Precise measurement of the travel cost variable is important to arrive at correct welfare estimates. In the third part of this study, we put on a twist in the Contingent Behavior (CB) methodology in the setting of a developing country, which has little application in the literature, which suggests a change in entrance fees at one park and queries how visitation patterns would then change at a substitute park. This allows us to estimate optimal entrance fees for revenue maximization and give an estimation of the demand function. The results indicate there is a possibility of maximizing revenue by raising entrance fee and the demand is elastic. The park agency is not advised to charge the revenue maximizing price because of competition from other parks, both locally and regionally. Nonetheless, the fact that we found that the fees can be raised significantly above the current fees to maximize the revenue collection is important.
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language eng
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license_str Not specified — see source repository
provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
publishDate 2022
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spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/35757 The Economic Value of Serengeti National Park in Tanzania and Implications for Adjacent Local Communities Kibira, Gerald Muchapondwa, Edwin Economics This study presents a theme on the Economic Value of Serengeti National Park in Tanzania and Implications for Adjacent local communities. Firstly, we introduce and develop a bio-economic model to examine optimal combination of livestock production and wildlife conservation designed for the Serengeti ecosystem in Tanzania. The model incorporates a group of pastoralists who apportion a certain amount of effort between pastoralism and wildlife activities, that is, poaching which kills wildlife. The park agency has a significant role by defining the penalty to the community when its members are caught poaching. The Maasai who live adjacent to Serengeti National Park are found in Loliondo division, which is in Ngorongoro district. This paper articulates a bio-economic model for the two agents, optimizes the market problem for each agent, and relates the outcomes for the park agency and the Maasai community to the social planner's solution. The results show that the market outcomes are suboptimal than the social planner would recommend. Policy implications are that there should be a well-structured community organization that can have a significant impact on the growth of the wildlife stock, through obliging behavior. Such an organization might assist the community to realize a needed social outcome to protect the Serengeti's wildlife. In the second part of the thesis we argue that, National Parks are imperative to protect countries' natural inheritance. They are vital for conservation and offer valuable non-market recreation services to tourists. Benefits from these parks include employment creation, and export incomes. Because of low entrance fees, parks largely depend on fiscal transfers to fund their conservation activities. But dwindling government resources in Africa threaten the existence of national parks and other protected areas. Sustained effective conservation will have to be largely internally funded. Tourism is an important avenue of funds in these circumstances. We measure the nonmarket benefits of Serengeti National Park for international holidaymakers. We make use of data from an on-site survey at the park. We make use of individual Travel cost variables. Models accounting for all problems found in on-site surveys tend to outperform other models. Estimated consumer surplus is large, given the usually low entrance fees. Precise measurement of the travel cost variable is important to arrive at correct welfare estimates. In the third part of this study, we put on a twist in the Contingent Behavior (CB) methodology in the setting of a developing country, which has little application in the literature, which suggests a change in entrance fees at one park and queries how visitation patterns would then change at a substitute park. This allows us to estimate optimal entrance fees for revenue maximization and give an estimation of the demand function. The results indicate there is a possibility of maximizing revenue by raising entrance fee and the demand is elastic. The park agency is not advised to charge the revenue maximizing price because of competition from other parks, both locally and regionally. Nonetheless, the fact that we found that the fees can be raised significantly above the current fees to maximize the revenue collection is important. 2022-02-18T09:50:13Z 2022-02-18T09:50:13Z 2021 2022-02-16T15:33:53Z Doctoral Thesis Doctoral PhD http://hdl.handle.net/11427/35757 eng application/pdf School of Economics Faculty of Commerce
spellingShingle Economics
Kibira, Gerald
The Economic Value of Serengeti National Park in Tanzania and Implications for Adjacent Local Communities
thesis_degree_str Doctoral
title The Economic Value of Serengeti National Park in Tanzania and Implications for Adjacent Local Communities
title_full The Economic Value of Serengeti National Park in Tanzania and Implications for Adjacent Local Communities
title_fullStr The Economic Value of Serengeti National Park in Tanzania and Implications for Adjacent Local Communities
title_full_unstemmed The Economic Value of Serengeti National Park in Tanzania and Implications for Adjacent Local Communities
title_short The Economic Value of Serengeti National Park in Tanzania and Implications for Adjacent Local Communities
title_sort economic value of serengeti national park in tanzania and implications for adjacent local communities
topic Economics
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/35757
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