Productivity of nations: a stochastic frontier approach to TFP decomposition

Detalhes bibliográficos
Autor(a) principal: Pires, Jorge Oliveira
Data de Publicação: 2004
Outros Autores: Garcia, Fernando
Tipo de documento: Artigo
Idioma: eng
Título da fonte: Repositório Institucional do FGV (FGV Repositório Digital)
Texto Completo: http://hdl.handle.net/10438/1945
Resumo: This Paper Tackles the Problem of Aggregate Tfp Measurement Using Stochastic Frontier Analysis (Sfa). Data From Penn World Table 6.1 are Used to Estimate a World Production Frontier For a Sample of 75 Countries Over a Long Period (1950-2000) Taking Advantage of the Model Offered By Battese and Coelli (1992). We Also Apply the Decomposition of Tfp Suggested By Bauer (1990) and Kumbhakar (2000) to a Smaller Sample of 36 Countries Over the Period 1970-2000 in Order to Evaluate the Effects of Changes in Efficiency (Technical and Allocative), Scale Effects and Technical Change. This Allows Us to Analyze the Role of Productivity and Its Components in Economic Growth of Developed and Developing Nations in Addition to the Importance of Factor Accumulation. Although not Much Explored in the Study of Economic Growth, Frontier Techniques Seem to Be of Particular Interest For That Purpose Since the Separation of Efficiency Effects and Technical Change Has a Direct Interpretation in Terms of the Catch-Up Debate. The Estimated Technical Efficiency Scores Reveal the Efficiency of Nations in the Production of Non Tradable Goods Since the Gdp Series Used is Ppp-Adjusted. We Also Provide a Second Set of Efficiency Scores Corrected in Order to Reveal Efficiency in the Production of Tradable Goods and Rank Them. When Compared to the Rankings of Productivity Indexes Offered By Non-Frontier Studies of Hall and Jones (1996) and Islam (1995) Our Ranking Shows a Somewhat More Intuitive Order of Countries. Rankings of the Technical Change and Scale Effects Components of Tfp Change are Also Very Intuitive. We Also Show That Productivity is Responsible For Virtually All the Differences of Performance Between Developed and Developing Countries in Terms of Rates of Growth of Income Per Worker. More Important, We Find That Changes in Allocative Efficiency Play a Crucial Role in Explaining Differences in the Productivity of Developed and Developing Nations, Even Larger Than the One Played By the Technology Gap
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spelling Pires, Jorge OliveiraGarcia, FernandoEscolas::EESP2008-10-16T19:10:16Z2008-10-16T19:10:16Z2004-12-312004-12-31T00:00:00Zhttp://hdl.handle.net/10438/1945This Paper Tackles the Problem of Aggregate Tfp Measurement Using Stochastic Frontier Analysis (Sfa). Data From Penn World Table 6.1 are Used to Estimate a World Production Frontier For a Sample of 75 Countries Over a Long Period (1950-2000) Taking Advantage of the Model Offered By Battese and Coelli (1992). We Also Apply the Decomposition of Tfp Suggested By Bauer (1990) and Kumbhakar (2000) to a Smaller Sample of 36 Countries Over the Period 1970-2000 in Order to Evaluate the Effects of Changes in Efficiency (Technical and Allocative), Scale Effects and Technical Change. This Allows Us to Analyze the Role of Productivity and Its Components in Economic Growth of Developed and Developing Nations in Addition to the Importance of Factor Accumulation. Although not Much Explored in the Study of Economic Growth, Frontier Techniques Seem to Be of Particular Interest For That Purpose Since the Separation of Efficiency Effects and Technical Change Has a Direct Interpretation in Terms of the Catch-Up Debate. The Estimated Technical Efficiency Scores Reveal the Efficiency of Nations in the Production of Non Tradable Goods Since the Gdp Series Used is Ppp-Adjusted. We Also Provide a Second Set of Efficiency Scores Corrected in Order to Reveal Efficiency in the Production of Tradable Goods and Rank Them. When Compared to the Rankings of Productivity Indexes Offered By Non-Frontier Studies of Hall and Jones (1996) and Islam (1995) Our Ranking Shows a Somewhat More Intuitive Order of Countries. Rankings of the Technical Change and Scale Effects Components of Tfp Change are Also Very Intuitive. We Also Show That Productivity is Responsible For Virtually All the Differences of Performance Between Developed and Developing Countries in Terms of Rates of Growth of Income Per Worker. More Important, We Find That Changes in Allocative Efficiency Play a Crucial Role in Explaining Differences in the Productivity of Developed and Developing Nations, Even Larger Than the One Played By the Technology GapengTextos para Discussão;143Stochastic frontiersTechnical changeTechnical efficiencyScale efficiencyTotal factor productivityAllocative efficiencyConvergenceC23O47EconomiaEconomiaProductivity of nations: a stochastic frontier approach to TFP decompositioninfo:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersioninfo:eu-repo/semantics/articlereponame:Repositório Institucional do FGV (FGV Repositório Digital)instname:Fundação Getulio Vargas (FGV)instacron:FGVinfo:eu-repo/semantics/openAccessORIGINALTD143.pdfapplication/pdf361261https://repositorio.fgv.br/bitstreams/48bdac9e-71ab-4a84-a6bf-e8cb650e61f5/downloaddf95da6ee834eae08ad170cc669a152aMD51TEXTTD143.pdf.txtTD143.pdf.txtExtracted texttext/plain87797https://repositorio.fgv.br/bitstreams/e5366fd5-b853-4bab-a6c2-629960dbcf9a/downloadc4855a2d6c02ce95b625ae0fd8b4312cMD56THUMBNAILTD143.pdf.jpgTD143.pdf.jpgGenerated Thumbnailimage/jpeg3991https://repositorio.fgv.br/bitstreams/96a2ae78-85c5-4f20-9100-8a108905acf8/download1eba976b54cd6696e9970e36fcafaf0cMD5710438/19452023-11-08 08:10:53.33open.accessoai:repositorio.fgv.br:10438/1945https://repositorio.fgv.brRepositório InstitucionalPRIhttp://bibliotecadigital.fgv.br/dspace-oai/requestopendoar:39742023-11-08T08:10:53Repositório Institucional do FGV (FGV Repositório Digital) - Fundação Getulio Vargas (FGV)false
dc.title.eng.fl_str_mv Productivity of nations: a stochastic frontier approach to TFP decomposition
title Productivity of nations: a stochastic frontier approach to TFP decomposition
spellingShingle Productivity of nations: a stochastic frontier approach to TFP decomposition
Pires, Jorge Oliveira
Stochastic frontiers
Technical change
Technical efficiency
Scale efficiency
Total factor productivity
Allocative efficiency
Convergence
C23
O47
Economia
Economia
title_short Productivity of nations: a stochastic frontier approach to TFP decomposition
title_full Productivity of nations: a stochastic frontier approach to TFP decomposition
title_fullStr Productivity of nations: a stochastic frontier approach to TFP decomposition
title_full_unstemmed Productivity of nations: a stochastic frontier approach to TFP decomposition
title_sort Productivity of nations: a stochastic frontier approach to TFP decomposition
author Pires, Jorge Oliveira
author_facet Pires, Jorge Oliveira
Garcia, Fernando
author_role author
author2 Garcia, Fernando
author2_role author
dc.contributor.unidadefgv.por.fl_str_mv Escolas::EESP
dc.contributor.author.fl_str_mv Pires, Jorge Oliveira
Garcia, Fernando
dc.subject.eng.fl_str_mv Stochastic frontiers
Technical change
Technical efficiency
Scale efficiency
Total factor productivity
topic Stochastic frontiers
Technical change
Technical efficiency
Scale efficiency
Total factor productivity
Allocative efficiency
Convergence
C23
O47
Economia
Economia
dc.subject.por.fl_str_mv Allocative efficiency
Convergence
dc.subject.classification.por.fl_str_mv C23
O47
dc.subject.area.por.fl_str_mv Economia
dc.subject.bibliodata.por.fl_str_mv Economia
description This Paper Tackles the Problem of Aggregate Tfp Measurement Using Stochastic Frontier Analysis (Sfa). Data From Penn World Table 6.1 are Used to Estimate a World Production Frontier For a Sample of 75 Countries Over a Long Period (1950-2000) Taking Advantage of the Model Offered By Battese and Coelli (1992). We Also Apply the Decomposition of Tfp Suggested By Bauer (1990) and Kumbhakar (2000) to a Smaller Sample of 36 Countries Over the Period 1970-2000 in Order to Evaluate the Effects of Changes in Efficiency (Technical and Allocative), Scale Effects and Technical Change. This Allows Us to Analyze the Role of Productivity and Its Components in Economic Growth of Developed and Developing Nations in Addition to the Importance of Factor Accumulation. Although not Much Explored in the Study of Economic Growth, Frontier Techniques Seem to Be of Particular Interest For That Purpose Since the Separation of Efficiency Effects and Technical Change Has a Direct Interpretation in Terms of the Catch-Up Debate. The Estimated Technical Efficiency Scores Reveal the Efficiency of Nations in the Production of Non Tradable Goods Since the Gdp Series Used is Ppp-Adjusted. We Also Provide a Second Set of Efficiency Scores Corrected in Order to Reveal Efficiency in the Production of Tradable Goods and Rank Them. When Compared to the Rankings of Productivity Indexes Offered By Non-Frontier Studies of Hall and Jones (1996) and Islam (1995) Our Ranking Shows a Somewhat More Intuitive Order of Countries. Rankings of the Technical Change and Scale Effects Components of Tfp Change are Also Very Intuitive. We Also Show That Productivity is Responsible For Virtually All the Differences of Performance Between Developed and Developing Countries in Terms of Rates of Growth of Income Per Worker. More Important, We Find That Changes in Allocative Efficiency Play a Crucial Role in Explaining Differences in the Productivity of Developed and Developing Nations, Even Larger Than the One Played By the Technology Gap
publishDate 2004
dc.date.submitted.none.fl_str_mv 2004-12-31T00:00:00Z
dc.date.issued.fl_str_mv 2004-12-31
dc.date.accessioned.fl_str_mv 2008-10-16T19:10:16Z
dc.date.available.fl_str_mv 2008-10-16T19:10:16Z
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