| The assumptions of full employment and complete mobility can often be applied plausibly to all inputs used in generating secondary project impacts. Thus, regardless of the size of the estimated change in value added from secondary impacts, it may be exactly offset by opportunity costs of the inputs used, leaving net secondary project benefits of zero. 2 |
| When a region is characterized with high levels of chronic idle or underemployed resources (i.e., high unemployment rates on a continuous basis), the neoclassical assumptions of fully employed resources may be relaxed and some of the secondary economic activity arising from a project considered a true net benefit.... [N]et secondary benefits are likely to exist in rural regions given the likelihood of unemployed resources in such regions. 3 |
September 1996 Study of 1992-1993 Season | |||
|   | Expenditures | Impact | |
| STEELHEAD SEASON | |||
|     Regional Communities | $ 4,488,239 | $ 8,831,114 | 262 |
|     Rest of State | $ 30,949,761 | $ 90,228,985 | 2,679 |
| Total | $ 35,439,000 | $ 99,060,099 | 2,939 |
| SALMON SEASON | |||
|     Regional Communities | $ 3,098,899 | $ 6,159,572 | 181 |
|     Rest of State | $ 21,369,225 | $ 56,201,062 | 1,652 |
| Total Salmon Season | $ 24,468,124 | $ 62,360,634 | 1,833 |
1997 Economic Survey for Chinook Fisheries Results | ||||
|
Survey Question | per day | Assumption | ||
| Q 26 | Grocery - Before | $21.26 | 58.3% | 75.0% Non-local |
|   | Grocery - During | $15.18 | 41.7% | 25.0% Local |
| Q 27 | Fishing Supplies - Before | $25.43 | 77.0% | 75.0% Non-local |
|   | Fishing Supplies - During | $7.58 | 23.0% | 25.0% Local |
| Q 28 | Other Equipment - Before | $16.84 | 70.8% | 85.0% Non-local |
|   | Other Equipment - During | $6.95 | 29.2% | 15.0% Local |
|
As the underlying linear models have never been verified, these further geographical
predictions could be wildly wrong. In short, Reading's local estimates are much shakier
than is his estimate of impact of steelhead angler's spending on the state or region as a
whole8. |
1997 Chinook Season Impact | ||
| Total Days:     29,190 | Expenditures | Impact |
| SALMON SEASON | ||
|     Regional Communities | $ 2,345,693 | $ 4,662,451 |
|     Rest of State | $ 3,376,165 | $ 9,920,551 |
| Total 1997 Season | $ 5,721,858 | $ 14,583,002 |
Salmon Study Comparison | ||||
|   | Direct Expenditures | Increase | ||
| September 1996 Study: | ||||
| SALMON SEASON | ||||
|     Regional Communities | $ 3,098,899 | $ 6,159,572 | 181 | |
|     Rest of State | $ 21,369,225 | $ 56,201,062 | 1,652 | |
| Total Salmon Season | $ 24,468,124 | $ 62,360,634 | 1,833 | |
| Recent Study: | ||||
| SALMON SEASON | ||||
|     Regional Communities | $ 11,601,200 | $ 23,059,295 | 678 | 274.4% |
|     Rest of State | $ 16,697,655 | $ 49,064,524 | 1,442 | -12.4% |
| Total Salmon Season | $ 28,298,855 | $ 72,123,819 | 2,120 | 15.7% |
1997 Economic Survey for Chinook Fisheries Composition of Question 19 Responses | ||
| Mode of Fishing | Anglers | Total |
| Jet Boat | 61 | 8.9% |
| Propeller Boat | 35 | 5.1% |
| Drift Boat | 13 | 1.9% |
| Bank Angling | 578 | 83.9% |
| Other | 2 | 0.3% |
| Total Responses: | 689 | 100.0% |
| To summarize: if most steelhead anglers are from out of state, the Reading estimates may be relevant. But if most are from Idaho, the economic impact on the whole state of opening or closing the steelhead fishery could be small, even trivial. Only the river communities might suffer. [emphasis added]15 |
|
This report explores the extent to which steelhead fishing provides the ?economic lifeblood'
for Idaho communities from Riggins to Salmon, and the economic prospects of both
sustained steelhead fishing and restored salmon fishing." [p. 2.] |