Precaution and the Precautionary Principle: Two Australian Case Studies

Productivity Commission Staff Working Paper

100 Pages Posted: 5 Oct 2007

Date Written: September 2007

Abstract

The Productivity Commission Staff Working Paper, 'Precaution and the Precautionary Principle: Two Australian Case Studies' (by Annette Weier and Paul Loke), was released in September 2007.

The Precautionary Principle was conceived as a response to the inherent difficulties faced by decision makers confronted with uncertain potential outcomes. Its purpose is to remove uncertainty as an obstacle to addressing potential environmental and health hazards. However, much confusion surrounds the Principle and its role in decision making under uncertainty.

This paper examines two Australian case studies where precaution has been an important element in decision making - fisheries management and licensing of genetically modified organisms (GMOs). It considers three key issues: the basis for precautionary decision making; how precaution has been applied in practice; and whether (and how) the Precautionary Principle contributed to precautionary decision making.

The views expressed in this paper are those of the staff involved and do not necessarily reflect those of the Productivity Commission.

This paper develops further some themes initially canvassed in the Presidential Address to the 2006 Australian Agricultural and Resource Economics Society conference presented by Deborah Peterson, and subsequently published in the 'Australian Journal of Agricultural and Resource Economics'.

Keywords: precautionary principle, fisheries management, genetically modified organisms, GMOs

JEL Classification: Q

Suggested Citation

Commission, Productivity, Precaution and the Precautionary Principle: Two Australian Case Studies (September 2007). Productivity Commission Staff Working Paper, Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=1019408 or http://dx.doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.1019408

Productivity Commission (Contact Author)

Government of Australia

Level 28
35 Collins St.
Melbourne, Victoria, Victoria 3000
Australia

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