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This book grows from a conference on the state of the art and
recent advances in Efficiency and Productivity. Papers were
commissioned from leading researchers in the field, and include
eight explorations into the analytical foundations of efficiency
and productivity analysis. Chapters on modeling advances include
reverse directional distance function, a new method for estimating
technological production possibilities, a new distance function
called a loss distance function, an analysis of productivity and
price recovery indices, the relation of technical efficiency
measures to productivity measures, the implications for
benchmarking and target setting of imposing weight restrictions on
DEA models, weight restrictions in a regulatory setting, and the
Principle of Least Action. Chapters on empirical applications
include a study of innovative firms that use innovation inputs to
produce innovation outputs, a study of the impact of potential
"coopetition" or cooperation among competitors on the financial
performance of European automobile plants, using SFA to estimate
the eco-efficiency of dairy farms in Spain, a DEA bankruptcy
prediction model, a combined stochastic cost frontier analysis
model/mixture hazard model, the evolution of energy intensity in
nine Spanish manufacturing industries, and the productivity of US
farmers as they age.
International Applications of Productivity and Efficiency Analysis
features a complete range of techniques utilized in frontier
analysis, including extensions of existing techniques and the
development of new techniques. Another feature is that most of the
contributions use panel data in a variety of approaches. Finally,
the range of empirical applications is at least as great as the
range of techniques, and many of the applications are of
considerable policy relevance.
The productivity of a business exerts an important influence on its
financial performance. A similar influence exists for industries
and economies: those with superior productivity performance thrive
at the expense of others. Productivity performance helps explain
the growth and demise of businesses and the relative prosperity of
nations. Productivity Accounting: The Economics of Business
Performance offers an in-depth analysis of variation in business
performance, providing the reader with an analytical framework
within which to account for this variation and its causes and
consequences. The primary focus is the individual business, and the
principal consequence of business productivity performance is
business financial performance. Alternative measures of financial
performance are considered, including profit, profitability, cost,
unit cost, and return on assets. Combining analytical rigor with
empirical illustrations, the analysis draws on wide-ranging
literatures, both historical and current, from business and
economics, and explains how businesses create value and distribute
it.
This book presents a mathematical programming approach to the
analysis of production frontiers and efficiency measurement. The
authors construct a variety of production frontiers, and by
measuring distances to them are able to develop a model of
efficient producer behaviour and a taxonomy of possible types of
departure from efficiency in various environments. Linear
programming is used as an analytical and computational technique in
order to accomplish this. The approach developed is then applied to
modelling producer behaviour. By focusing on the empirical
relevance of production frontiers and distances to them, and
applying linear programming techniques to artificial data to
illustrate the type of information they can generate, this book
provides a unique study in applied production analysis. It will be
of interest to scholars and students of economics and operations
research, and analysts in business and government.
When Harold Fried, et al. published The Measurement of Productive
Efficiency: Techniques and Applications with OUP in 1993, the book
received a great deal of professional interest for its accessible
treatment of the rapidly growing field of efficiency and
productivity analysis. The first several chapters, providing the
background, motivation, and theoretical foundations for this topic,
were the most widely recognized. In this tight, direct update,
these same editors have compiled over ten years of the most recent
research in this changing field, and expanded on those seminal
chapters. The book will guide readers from the basic models to the
latest, cutting-edge extensions, and will be reinforced by
references to classic and current theoretical and applied research.
It is intended for professors and graduate students in a variety of
fields, ranging from economics to agricultural economics, business
administration, management science, and public administration. It
should also appeal to public servants and policy makers engaged in
business performance analysis or regulation.
This book surveys the state-of-the-art in efficiency and
productivity analysis, examining advances in the analytical
foundations and empirical applications. The analytical techniques
developed in this book for efficiency provide alternative ways of
defining optimum outcome sets, typically as a (technical)
production frontier or as an (economic) cost, revenue or profit
frontier, and alternative ways of measuring efficiency relative to
an appropriate frontier. Simultaneously, the analytical techniques
developed for efficiency analysis extend directly to productivity
analysis, thereby providing alternative methods for estimating
productivity levels, and productivity change through time or
productivity variation across producers. This book includes
chapters using data envelopment analysis (DEA) or stochastic
frontier analysis (SFA) as quantitative techniques capable of
measuring efficiency and productivity. Across the book's 15
chapters, it broadly extends into popular application areas
including agriculture, banking and finance, and municipal
performance, and relatively new application areas including
corporate social responsibility, the value of intangible assets,
land consolidation, and the measurement of economic well-being. The
chapters also cover topics such as permutation tests for production
frontier shifts, new indices of total factor productivity, and also
randomized controlled trials and production frontiers.
This book grows from a conference on the state of the art and
recent advances in Efficiency and Productivity. Papers were
commissioned from leading researchers in the field, and include
eight explorations into the analytical foundations of efficiency
and productivity analysis. Chapters on modeling advances include
reverse directional distance function, a new method for estimating
technological production possibilities, a new distance function
called a loss distance function, an analysis of productivity and
price recovery indices, the relation of technical efficiency
measures to productivity measures, the implications for
benchmarking and target setting of imposing weight restrictions on
DEA models, weight restrictions in a regulatory setting, and the
Principle of Least Action. Chapters on empirical applications
include a study of innovative firms that use innovation inputs to
produce innovation outputs, a study of the impact of potential
"coopetition" or cooperation among competitors on the financial
performance of European automobile plants, using SFA to estimate
the eco-efficiency of dairy farms in Spain, a DEA bankruptcy
prediction model, a combined stochastic cost frontier analysis
model/mixture hazard model, the evolution of energy intensity in
nine Spanish manufacturing industries, and the productivity of US
farmers as they age.
This book presents a mathematical programming approach to the
analysis of production frontiers and efficiency measurement. The
authors construct a variety of production frontiers, and by
measuring distances to them are able to develop a model of
efficient producer behaviour and a taxonomy of possible types of
departure from efficiency in various environments. Linear
programming is used as an analytical and computational technique in
order to accomplish this. The approach developed is then applied to
modelling producer behaviour. By focusing on the empirical
relevance of production frontiers and distances to them, and
applying linear programming techniques to artificial data to
illustrate the type of information they can generate, this book
provides a unique study in applied production analysis. It will be
of interest to scholars and students of economics and operations
research, and analysts in business and government.
International Applications of Productivity and Efficiency Analysis
features a complete range of techniques utilized in frontier
analysis, including extensions of existing techniques and the
development of new techniques. Another feature is that most of the
contributions use panel data in a variety of approaches. Finally,
the range of empirical applications is at least as great as the
range of techniques, and many of the applications are of
considerable policy relevance.
The productivity of a business exerts an important influence on its
financial performance. A similar influence exists for industries
and economies: those with superior productivity performance thrive
at the expense of others. Productivity performance helps explain
the growth and demise of businesses and the relative prosperity of
nations. Productivity Accounting: The Economics of Business
Performance offers an in-depth analysis of variation in business
performance, providing the reader with an analytical framework
within which to account for this variation and its causes and
consequences. The primary focus is the individual business, and the
principal consequence of business productivity performance is
business financial performance. Alternative measures of financial
performance are considered, including profit, profitability, cost,
unit cost, and return on assets. Combining analytical rigor with
empirical illustrations, the analysis draws on wide-ranging
literatures, both historical and current, from business and
economics, and explains how businesses create value and distribute
it.
This book develops econometric techniques for the estimation of production, cost and profit frontiers, and for the estimation of the technical and economic efficiency with which producers approach these frontiers. Since these frontiers envelop rather than intersect the data, and since the authors continue to maintain the traditional econometric belief in the presence of external forces contributing to random statistical noise, the work is titled Stochastic Frontier Analysis. Hb ISBN (2000): 0-521-48184-8
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