3. Methodologies
While providing a broad overview of the Philippine milkfishresource system,
this paper will examine questions of technical and economic efficiency on the
one hand, and of equity on the other. Each of the sub-systems of procurement,
transformation, and delivery will be examined in turn, with the emphasis on
efficiency considerations. A common element will be to examine to what extent
the system's efficiency departs from the predictions of certain behavioural
assumptions and economic models of perfect competition, whereby factors of
production (and other "creators" of utility) are rewarded according to
their contribution to the total value of output. The model is useful because it
allows predictions as to the expected relationship among costs and prices in all
these sub-systems. The analysis that follows contains examination of both
technical and price formation efficiencies in the subsystems.The milkfish
resource system presents interesting and challenging avenues for analysis.
Elements of fisheries resource economics, microeconomic analysis of production,
and spatial economic theory are all drawn on to complete the evaluation of the
resource system.Data for this study are taken primarily from cross-sectional
data collected by the authors in various field surveys beginning in 1977.
Time-series and secondary data on the milkfish resource system are almost
non-existent, except for that on brackish-water pond area, production, and
wholesale and retail market prices. Consequently many interesting questions
related to supply-and-demand elasticities have not been
addressed.