Christine Exley, a graduate student in Economics at Stanford, writes me about a new matching market,
Wagaroo, that aims to cut the search costs for finding pet dogs from responsible sources. (NB, the site may not yet work with all browsers.) She writes:
"It
is
estimated
that 23.5 million people plan to acquire a pet every year. Of this, 1.5
million intend to buy their pet from a breeder, 5 million are committed to
adopting their pet, and 17 million are undecided about the source for their new
pet. At the same time,
3 million dogs and cats are killed every year in
shelters because they cannot find a home. When you
account
for people acquiring dogs from shelters, rescue groups, the street (i.e.,
strays), friends, family members and purebred breeders, there are still over 6
million people acquiring dogs and cats from “other” sources. These other
sources (as well as some of the listed sources) are likely
puppy mills – places that
mass-produce dogs for profit in horrid conditions.
"Why
do people get dogs from puppy mills and hence increase the demand for this
inhumane practice in the face of so many adoptable dogs being killed in
shelters? There are two leading answers.
First,
separately identifying puppy mills from responsible breeders is
challenging. Both puppy mills and responsible breeders sell
purebreds for upwards of $1,000, and puppy mills are quick to imitate
responsible breeders by falsely advertising that their dogs are bred and cared
for in good conditions. Second, the search costs of acquiring dogs
from responsible sources are incredibly high since no unified market
exists. While you may need to search dozens of responsible organizations
before you find an available Black Labrador puppy, a quick Google search is
guaranteed to show an available Black Labrador puppy from a puppy mill.
Wagaroo will change this through an online
listing of dogs from all responsible sources – shelters, rescue groups,
responsible breeders and owners needing to re-home their dogs. No puppy mills
allowed! While Wagaroo is in early stages, (ideas on how to
perfectly separate puppy mills from responsible breeders are welcome), we look
forward to building such a comprehensive listing and providing people with a
simple, reputable way to find a dog from responsible sources. If we make
it easy, then we know that people will do the right thing. "