Suzette P. Galinato
Washington State University
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Publication
Featured researches published by Suzette P. Galinato.
Environment and Development Economics | 2012
Gregmar I. Galinato; Suzette P. Galinato
This article formulates an empirical model that measures the short- and long-run effects of political stability, corruption control and economic growth on CO2 emissions from deforestation. Political stability and corruption have significant effects on forest cover in the short run and have lingering long-run effects. We derive a U-shaped forest–income curve where forest cover initially declines as per capita income increases, but starts to rise after an income turning point. Political stability and corruption control do not significantly affect the income turning point but both variables shift the forest–income curve up or down. The resulting CO2 emission–income curve is downward sloping and is based on changes in the levels of variables affecting forest cover. Increased political stability flattens the CO2 emissions–income curve, leading to smaller changes of CO2 emissions per unit change in income.
Agricultural and Resource Economics Review | 2013
Eric J. Belasco; Suzette P. Galinato; Tom Marsh; Carol Miles; Russell W. Wallace
High tunnels are being used by specialty crop producers to enhance production yields and quality, extend growing seasons, and protect crops from extreme weather. The tunnels are unheated, plastic-covered structures under which crops are planted directly in the soil, and they provide greater environmental protection and control than open-field production. This study uses field-level experiments to evaluate high-tunnel production. The results suggest that investments in high tunnels can provide increased profits and superior protection against adverse risks relative to crop insurance.
Food Research International | 2018
Kuan-Ju Chen; Thomas L. Marsh; Peter R. Tozer; Suzette P. Galinato
This study evaluates consumer preferences for an agricultural product grown on biodegradable mulch film, which is an environmentally friendly soil cover that sustains plant growth, but that avoids the environmental harm of plastic pollution from non-biodegradable mulches in the field or upon disposal. Using a dichotomous-choice contingent valuation method, we assessed the willingness to pay for strawberries grown on biodegradable mulch with a randomized information treatment on 1510 consumers across different regions of the United States. On average, consumers are willing to pay 10.3% more for food -strawberries in our case- grown on biodegradable mulches. Consumers who are female, earn a higher income, have stronger environment-friendly attitudes, or received the information treatment on the benefits of biodegradable mulches, also expressed more willingness to pay a premium price for strawberries grown on biodegradable mulches. Our findings support that consumers are willing to internalize a price premium for food products on biodegradable mulches, suggesting that agricultural producers could realize private benefits from price premiums that could, in turn, generate social benefits by increasing biodegradable mulch use, leading to a reduction of plastic pollution. By providing empirical evidence on the potential adoption of biotechnology in the food production system, our results allow agricultural crop producers to make more informed decisions on growing and pricing strategies. Our research will also facilitate agricultural scientists and policymakers to articulate industry-supporting policies for sustainable development.
Energy Policy | 2011
Suzette P. Galinato; Jonathan K. Yoder; David Granatstein
Biomass & Bioenergy | 2011
Jonathan K. Yoder; Suzette P. Galinato; David Granatstein; Manuel Garcia-Perez
Horttechnology | 2013
Suzette P. Galinato; Carol Miles
Journal of Wine Economics | 2015
Peter R. Tozer; Suzette P. Galinato; Carolyn F. Ross; Carol A. Miles; Jill J. McCluskey
Ecological Economics | 2013
Gregmar I. Galinato; Suzette P. Galinato
Energy Economics | 2016
Tristan D. Skolrud; Gregmar I. Galinato; Suzette P. Galinato; C. Richard Shumway; Jonathan K. Yoder
Ecological Economics | 2016
Gregmar I. Galinato; Suzette P. Galinato