After a nice
and relaxing free weekend in Salzburg, Austria, we met up with the rest of the
group Monday morning in Trento. It was defiantly good to be back on Italian
soil!
In Trento we
had a meeting with a professor who talked to us about common-pool resources.
From there we got on a bus and went to Cavalese, a small cute village in the
Italian Alps. The next day, Tuesday, we had another meeting about common-pool
resources. We met with some board members of the “Magnifica Comunita di
Fiemme.” Magnifica Comunita dates back to the 12th century and
represents the inhabitants of the 11 villages in the valley Di Fiemme. As an
inhabitant of the valley you have shared ownership and rights to use the land,
for example to hunt and to fish. The goal of Magnifica Comunita is to manage
and preserve the collective property (mainly wood and pasture land) and to use
the revenues to give back to the community. This institution is quiet successful
compared to many similar institutions. A few years ago the Magnifica Comunita
was able to build a local hospital using wood from their forests.
Cavalese |
Corey and I
were given an article called “Decentralized management of common property
resources.” For centuries, villages in the Alps have used this special system,
like the Magnifica Comunita, to manage their common resources. Every inhabitant
can inspect other inhabitants (making sure there are no free riders) at their
own cost, inflict punishments and be rewarded for doing so under clear defined
legal laws. There are two types of “inspectors”, the spiteful ones and the
altruistic ones. The spiteful individual experiences a loss in utility when
others income increases, but his or hers remains constant. The altruistic
individual experiences a gain in utility when others income increases but his
or her income remains the same. The gain in income comes from when an inspector
gets part of the fine the “free rider” must pay. Normally altruistic behavior is favored, but
that is not the case in this system. It is also one of the reasons why this
system is successful. The system channels attitudes that might normally be
considered dysfunctional into useful social preferences.
We had a lot
of free time in Cavalese and of course the highlight was skiing in the Alps. As
we like to say, “Only in Econ 315 can you get this experience!”
Econ 315 skiing! |
Wow that looks incredible!
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