Browsing by Subject "Technical Efficiency"
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Item Open Access Measuring technical efficiency differentials of cotton farmers in Pakistan(2000) Aguir, SabeurThis thesis examines the technical efficiency differentials of production of cotton farmers in the two provinces, Sind and Punjab, of Pakistan. Both parametric and semi-parametric stochastic frontier models were u.sed to inve.stigate the relationships that might exist between the farm size, the educational background, the ownership status and farmers' efficiency. The results of both of the models show that farm size plays an important role in measuring the efficiency of farmers. Increasing farm size in Punjab decreases inefficiency whereas farms should be smaller in Sind to be more effective. Education was found to decrease inefficiency in Punjab whereas it is counterproductive in Sind. Owneroperated farms of Punjab are more efficient. The results of this thesis warrants need for major structural reforms in order to increase productivity in the agriculture sector of Pakistan.Item Open Access Three essays on technical efficiency in Turkish manufacturing industries(2001) Kale, PelinThis study includes three essays on technical efficiency in Turkish manufacturing industries during 1983-1994. The first one, presented in Chapter III, investigates the sources of inefficiency in the food, textiles, machinery, chemicals and the aggregate manufacturing industries within a stochastic frontier (SF) framework. Panel data sets with four-digit industries are used. Among possible sources of inefficiency, industry-specific structural and organizational factors are considered. Results suggest that public ownership is detrimental to technical efficiency while higher real wages or engagement in international trade enhances it. Regarding the effects of domestic competition, no common pattern emerges. The second essay, presented in Chapter IV, investigates the time pattern of technical efficiency and technological change. Parametric SF and nonparametric data envelopment analysis (DEA) techniques are applied to five panel data sets used in the first essay. Results suggest that mean efficiency increased in the chemicals industry, declined in the machinery industry and remained time-invariant in the food, textiles and the aggregate manufacturing industries. Malmquist productivity indices show that sources of productivity growth differed across industries. In the food and machinery industries, technological progress accounted for productivity improvements while the chemicals and textiles industries witnessed significant efficiency improvements. The third essay, presented in Chapter V, uses semiparametric methods to construct an efficient frontier for the aggregate manufacturing industry. The benchmark technology is estimated by kernel regressions and efficiency scores calculated by fixed effects models. Comparison of results to those from DEA and SF models suggest that semiparametric and SF models not only yield close mean efficiency estimates but also are highly consistent in ranking industries.