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The format of this monograph is three essays, which we arrived at
after spending a year writing over one hundred pages of what we
even tually realized was a tedious reworking of old material. So we
started over determined to write something new. At first we thought
this approach might not work as a coherent mono graph, which is why
we chose the essay format rather than chapters. As it turns out,
there is a common thread-namely the directional distance function,
which also gave us our title. As you shall see, the directional
distance function includes traditional distance functions and
efficiency measures as special cases providing a unifying framework
for existing productivity and efficiency measures. It is also
flexible enough to open up new areas in productivity and efficiency
analysis such as environmen tal and aggregation issues. That we did
not see this earlier is humbling; a student at a recent conference
raised his hand and asked 'Why didn't you start with the
directional distance function in the first place? In deed. This
manuscript is intended to make up for our earlier oversights. This
monograph contains papers coauthored with Wen-Fu Lee and Osman Zaim
and one paper written by two former students, Hiroyuki Fukuyama and
Bill Weber. We thank them for their contributions. An other former
student, Jim Logan (Logi) read and critiqued the manu script for
which we are grateful."
Economists have long studied the efficiency of firms, industries,
and entire economies. This volume brings together leading scholars
to make connections between efficiency and a number of diverse
areas of current interest to economists, including an examination
of the efficiency of tax systems across generations that overlap,
and the efficiency of firm mergers that highlights the tradeoff
between the synergy of the merger and the problem of managerial
oversight in the now larger firm. An empirical look at productivity
growth of states uses a tripartite decomposition of labor
productivity into technological innovation, improvement in
efficiency, and the capital deepening brought about by new business
investment, shedding light on important debates on their relative
importance. The efficiency of patent laws is examined in a modern
model of economic growth. These contributions are complemented by
analyses of methodological problems involved in the measurement,
estimation and aggregation of efficiency indices.
Professor Sten Malmquist constructed the Malmquist quantity index
and in doing so developed a distance function defined on a
consumption space. This function is the consumer analog to the
Shephard input distance function of producers and is used in ratio
form to define the quantity index. This volume contains new
contributions based on Malmquist's work nearly 50 years ago and
provides modern perspectives on the value of this research.
Our original reason for writing this book was the desire to write
down in one place a complete summary of the major results in du
ality theory pioneered by Ronald W. Shephard in three of his books,
Cost and Production Functions (1953), Theory of Cost and Produc
tion Functions (1970), and Indirect Production Functions (1974). In
this way, newcomers to the field would have easy access to these
important ideas. In adg, ition, we report a few new results of our
own. In particular, we show the duality relationship between the
profit function and the eight equivalent representations of technol
ogy that were elucidated by Shephard. However, in planning the book
and discussing it with colleagues it became evident that such a
book would be more useful if it also provided a number of
applications of Shephard's duality theory to economic problems.
Thus, we have also attempted to present exam ples of the use of
duality theory in areas such as efficiency measure ment, index
number theory, shadow pricing, cost-benefit analysis, and
econometric estimation. Much of our thinking about duality theory
and its uses has been influenced by our present and former
collaborators. They include Charles Blackorby, Shawna Grosskopf,
Knox Lovell, Robert Russell, and, not surprisingly, Ronald W.
Shephard. We have also benefit ted over the years from many
discussions with W. Erwin Diewert."
Our intention with this book is to extend the efficiency literature
to the case of intertemporal models. We do this in steps. First, we
introduce static network models which will serve as building blocks
for our intertemporal budgeting models and our dynamic models.
Next, we devote two chapters to productivity measurements, which we
think of as comparative static models. Intertemporal budgeting
models and dynamic models are taken up after that. Each chapter,
except Chapter One, contains an empirical applica- tion. These
applications are coauthored with colleagues and stu- dents; thanks
are due to Runar Brannlund, Yijan He, Julius Hor- vath, Pontus
Roos, Jerry Whittaker and S. (Lek) Yaisawarng . . We would also
like to thank Dale Boisso and Kathy Hayes for gra- ciously sharing
their data on Illinois municipalities with us. Two of the
applications are already published, namely: "Environmental
Regulation and Profitability: Applications to Swedish Pulp and Pa-
per Mills," Environmental and Resource Economics 6: 23-36, 1995,
(Section 2. 5) and "Productivity and Quality Changes in Swedish
Pharmacies," International Journal of Production Economics 39:
137-144, 1995, (Section 3. 5). We are grateful to Kluwer Academic
Publishers and Elsevier Science for kindly allowing us to reproduce
these publications here. During the summer 1995 we spent a very
enjoyable two months at the Center for Economic Studies (CES) at
the University of Munich.
Sweden has a long history of ambitious environmental, energy and
climate policy. Due to the large amount of data available it is
possible to perform statistically sound analysis and assess long
term changes in productivity, efficiency, and technological
development. The data at hand together with Sweden's ambitious
energy and climate policy provides a unique opportunity to shed
light on pertinent policy issues. The Impact of Climate Policy on
Environmental and Economic Performance answers several key
questions: What is the effect of the CO2 tax on environmental
performance and profitability of firms? Does including emissions in
productivity measurement of the industrial firm matter? Did the
introduction of the EU ETS spur technological development in the
Swedish industrial firm? What air pollutant is most inhibiting
production when regulated? Being aware and learning from the
Swedish case can be very relevant for countries that are in the
process of shaping their climate policy. This book is of great
importance to researchers and policy makers who are interested in
environmental economics, industrial economics and climate change.
Data Envelopment Analysis (DEA) is often overlooked in empirical
work such as diagnostic tests to determine whether the data conform
with technology which, in turn, is important in identifying
technical change, or finding which types of DEA models allow data
transformations, including dealing with ordinal data.Advances in
Data Envelopment Analysis focuses on both theoretical developments
and their applications into the measurement of productive
efficiency and productivity growth, such as its application to the
modelling of time substitution, i.e. the problem of how to allocate
resources over time, and estimating the 'value' of a Decision
Making Unit (DMU).
Sweden has a long history of ambitious environmental, energy and
climate policy. Due to the large amount of data available it is
possible to perform statistically sound analysis and assess long
term changes in productivity, efficiency, and technological
development. The data at hand together with Sweden's ambitious
energy and climate policy provides a unique opportunity to shed
light on pertinent policy issues. The Impact of Climate Policy on
Environmental and Economic Performance answers several key
questions: What is the effect of the CO2 tax on environmental
performance and profitability of firms? Does including emissions in
productivity measurement of the industrial firm matter? Did the
introduction of the EU ETS spur technological development in the
Swedish industrial firm? What air pollutant is most inhibiting
production when regulated? Being aware and learning from the
Swedish case can be very relevant for countries that are in the
process of shaping their climate policy. This book is of great
importance to researchers and policy makers who are interested in
environmental economics, industrial economics and climate change.
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Production Frontiers (Hardcover)
Rolf Fare, Shawna Grosskopf, C.A. Knox Lovell
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R2,863
R2,477
Discovery Miles 24 770
Save R386 (13%)
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Ships in 12 - 17 working days
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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.
Professor Sten Malmquist constructed the Malmquist quantity index
and in doing so developed a distance function defined on a
consumption space. This function is the consumer analog to the
Shephard input distance function of producers and is used in ratio
form to define the quantity index. This volume contains new
contributions based on Malmquist's work nearly 50 years ago and
provides modern perspectives on the value of this research.
Our original reason for writing this book was the desire to write
down in one place a complete summary of the major results in du
ality theory pioneered by Ronald W. Shephard in three of his books,
Cost and Production Functions (1953), Theory of Cost and Produc
tion Functions (1970), and Indirect Production Functions (1974). In
this way, newcomers to the field would have easy access to these
important ideas. In adg, ition, we report a few new results of our
own. In particular, we show the duality relationship between the
profit function and the eight equivalent representations of technol
ogy that were elucidated by Shephard. However, in planning the book
and discussing it with colleagues it became evident that such a
book would be more useful if it also provided a number of
applications of Shephard's duality theory to economic problems.
Thus, we have also attempted to present exam ples of the use of
duality theory in areas such as efficiency measure ment, index
number theory, shadow pricing, cost-benefit analysis, and
econometric estimation. Much of our thinking about duality theory
and its uses has been influenced by our present and former
collaborators. They include Charles Blackorby, Shawna Grosskopf,
Knox Lovell, Robert Russell, and, not surprisingly, Ronald W.
Shephard. We have also benefit ted over the years from many
discussions with W. Erwin Diewert."
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.
Our intention with this book is to extend the efficiency literature
to the case of intertemporal models. We do this in steps. First, we
introduce static network models which will serve as building blocks
for our intertemporal budgeting models and our dynamic models.
Next, we devote two chapters to productivity measurements, which we
think of as comparative static models. Intertemporal budgeting
models and dynamic models are taken up after that. Each chapter,
except Chapter One, contains an empirical applica- tion. These
applications are coauthored with colleagues and stu- dents; thanks
are due to Runar Brannlund, Yijan He, Julius Hor- vath, Pontus
Roos, Jerry Whittaker and S. (Lek) Yaisawarng . . We would also
like to thank Dale Boisso and Kathy Hayes for gra- ciously sharing
their data on Illinois municipalities with us. Two of the
applications are already published, namely: "Environmental
Regulation and Profitability: Applications to Swedish Pulp and Pa-
per Mills," Environmental and Resource Economics 6: 23-36, 1995,
(Section 2. 5) and "Productivity and Quality Changes in Swedish
Pharmacies," International Journal of Production Economics 39:
137-144, 1995, (Section 3. 5). We are grateful to Kluwer Academic
Publishers and Elsevier Science for kindly allowing us to reproduce
these publications here. During the summer 1995 we spent a very
enjoyable two months at the Center for Economic Studies (CES) at
the University of Munich.
The basic notion underlying this monograph - budget or revenue
constrained models of production - we owe to Ronald W. Shephard,
who recognized its fundamental importance in modeling behavior in a
wide variety of settings including the service and public sector.
Our endeavor here is to extend Shephard's earlier work in several
directions while maintaining his axiomatic approach. Our
contributions include an expanded set of duality results and a
general bent toward empirical implementation: including various
parameterizations, applications to efficiency and productivity
measurement, and shadow pricing. We hope to provide those engaged
in empirical work with some powerful and useful tools which have
received relatively little attention. The nature of the material in
this monograph is somewhat technical, however, the level of
mathematical difficulty is standard. Although we have tried to keep
the monograph fairly self-contained, we have also kept technical
detail to a minimum in the body of the text. Many technical
extensions appear as problems at the ends of Chapters. The reader
is also referred to the notes at the end of each chapter for
references to additional literature. A prepublication draft of this
manuscript was used as lecture notes in a graduate course in
production theory at the Department of Economics at Bilkent
University. We thank our students as well as faculty members for
their patience and interest. Special thanks go to Dean Togan,
Zeynap Koksal and Ali Dogramaci for making our stay in Ankara not
only productive, but also enjoyable.
This volume brings together leading scholars to make connections
between efficiency and a number of diverse areas of current
interest to economists. Included are new results concerning
aggregation of technical efficiency, sources of productivity growth
in U.S. manufacturing, intellectual property rights, and the
determinants of successful mergers.
The format of this monograph is three essays, which we arrived at
after spending a year writing over one hundred pages of what we
even tually realized was a tedious reworking of old material. So we
started over determined to write something new. At first we thought
this approach might not work as a coherent mono graph, which is why
we chose the essay format rather than chapters. As it turns out,
there is a common thread-namely the directional distance function,
which also gave us our title. As you shall see, the directional
distance function includes traditional distance functions and
efficiency measures as special cases providing a unifying framework
for existing productivity and efficiency measures. It is also
flexible enough to open up new areas in productivity and efficiency
analysis such as environmen tal and aggregation issues. That we did
not see this earlier is humbling; a student at a recent conference
raised his hand and asked 'Why didn't you start with the
directional distance function in the first place? In deed. This
manuscript is intended to make up for our earlier oversights. This
monograph contains papers coauthored with Wen-Fu Lee and Osman Zaim
and one paper written by two former students, Hiroyuki Fukuyama and
Bill Weber. We thank them for their contributions. An other former
student, Jim Logan (Logi) read and critiqued the manu script for
which we are grateful."
Written by production economics and finance specialists Rolf Fare
and Shawna Grosskopf of Oregon State University and Dimitris
Margaritis of the University of Auckland, Pricing Non-marketed
Goods Using Distance Functions, is an inspiring new contribution
highlighting the importance of duality theory for valuation
purposes, especially for hard to price inputs or resources,
intended or unintended goods and assets. The theoretical pricing
models are supplemented by self-standing empirical applications
covering real estate pricing, environmental preservation, transfer
pricing, shadow prices of university knowledge outputs and
spillovers, and the pricing of bank equity capital and
non-performing loans.
This graduate text develops production theory from a set of
reasonable axioms. The theory is presented both in a primal and
dual as well as in an indirect (constrained) framework. The basic
model leads to a set of efficiency measures which can be readily
employed in empirical work. A first draft of the text was used to
teach students at Vanderbilt University. The text includes a
variety of exercise problems.
Diminishing Returns is a concept deeply rooted in economic thought.
After being introduced by Turgot in 1767 it has become accepted as
one of the cornerstones of contemporary economic theory. My
interest in this area started in the fall semester of 1971 at U.C.
Berkeley where I was enrolled in Professor Ronald W. Shephard's
class on the theory of production. Shephard introduced me to his
work on the Law of Diminishing Returns, and encouraged me to
continue that work. This monograph is a result of my inspiring
experience with Professor Shephard; and I am sincerely grateful to
him for everything he has taught me. In developing some of the
materials in this monograph I have collabo rated with my Swedish
friends Leif Jansson and Leif Svensson. It has been a pleasure to
work with such capable individuals. For reading and making
suggestions on a preliminary version of the monograph, thanks are
due to W. Eichhorn, R. Kirk and R. Sato, and of course to my SIu
friends Shawna Grosskopf and Dan Primont. I would also like to
gratefully acknowledge the support received from a Stiftelsen
Siamon grant. Lastbut not least, special thanks are given to
Claudia Striegel for her care and patience in typing this
manuscript. Rolf Fare October, 1979 Carbondale, Illinois TABLE OF
CONTENTS Page CHAPTER 1. DIMINISHING RETURNS 1 1.1 Introduction ..
1.2 Restrictions of the Study 3 1.3 Outline of the Monograph. 4
CHAPTER 2. THE PRODUCTION TECHNOLOGY 5 2.1 Introduction ...... .
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