Search results for "Total factor productivity"

showing 10 items of 45 documents

Assessment of the Total Factor Productivity Change in the Spanish Ports: Hicks–Moorsteen Productivity Index Approach

2016

AbstractThe assessment of the productivity growth of ports is essential to improve their performance and competitiveness. Although there are several nonparametric methodologies to compute the productivity change, the Hicks–Moorsteen productivity index is the only multiplicatively completed index that can be computed without price data. For the first time, the total factor productivity (TFP) change of a sample of ports is evaluated. The analysis covers the 28 ports comprising the Spanish port system, using data over the period 2005–2012. The drivers of TFP—technical change, technical efficiency, mix efficiency, and residual scale efficiency—are also investigated. The results indicate that fr…

050210 logistics & transportationIndex (economics)Operations research05 social sciencesPartial productivityOcean EngineeringPort (computer networking)Technical changeScale (social sciences)0502 economics and businessEconomicsEconometricsData envelopment analysisTotal factor productivityProductivity050203 business & managementWater Science and TechnologyCivil and Structural EngineeringJournal of Waterway, Port, Coastal, and Ocean Engineering
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The impact of the subsidy policy on total factor productivity : an empirical analysis of China's cotton production

2013

Published version of an article in the journal: Mathematical Problems in Engineering. Also available from the publisher at: http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2013/248537 Open access This paper develops one model to explore the relationship between the subsidy policy and the agricultural total factor productivity (TFP). It indicates that the agricultural TFP will be lower after the subsidy policy is implemented and there exists a negative relation between the subsidy and TFP, if subsidies are associated with the acreage. Using Malmquist index, this paper measures the changes of TFP in China's cotton production before and after the subsidy policy is implemented. The results verify that the subsidy po…

Article Subjectbusiness.industryGeneral Mathematicslcsh:MathematicsGeneral EngineeringSubsidylcsh:QA1-939Agricultural economicsVDP::Mathematics and natural science: 400::Mathematics: 410Agriculturelcsh:TA1-2040EconomicsProduction (economics)Chinabusinesslcsh:Engineering (General). Civil engineering (General)Total factor productivityMalmquist index
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Transport infrastructures, spillover effects and regional growth: evidence of the Spanish case

2005

The impact of transport infrastructures on the economic growth of both regions and sectors, distinguishing among modes of transport, is analysed. An attempt is also made to capture the spillover effects associated with transport infrastructures. Two different methodologies are used: the first adopts an accounting approach based on a regression on indices of total factor productivity; the second uses econometric estimates of the production function. Very similar elasticities are obtained with both methodologies for the private sector of the economy, both for the aggregate capital stock of transport infrastructures and for the various types of infrastructure. However, the disaggregated result…

Capital stockSpillover effectEconomyEconomicsProduction (economics)TransportationEconomic geographyProduction functionPrivate sectorTotal factor productivityPort (computer networking)Transport Reviews
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COMPLEMENTARITY BETWEEN LOCAL KNOWLEDGE AND INTERNATIONALIZATION IN REGIONAL TECHNOLOGICAL PROGRESS

2006

Trade, foreign direct investment, and inter-regional R&D spillovers facilitate competition, the spread of knowledge, and the adoption of more advanced technologies, which in turn hastens total factor productivity (TFP) growth. The spread of these efficiency gains from internationalization requires a sufficient local knowledge to enable them to be adapted to the domestic productive environment. Thus, higher local knowledge and internationalization will lead to TFP growth, and the greater the complementarity between variables the higher the TFP growth. We test the complementarity hypothesis using Spanish regional data over the period 1980–1995 in which both regional local knowledge and intern…

Competition (economics)InternationalizationTechnological changeComplementarity (molecular biology)EconomicsEconomic geographyForeign direct investmentEnvironmental Science (miscellaneous)DevelopmentEconomic systemTotal factor productivityJournal of Regional Science
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Labor Productivity Growth: Disentangling Technology and Capital Accumulation

2014

We adopt a counterfactual approach to decompose labor productivity growth into growth of Technological Productivity (TEP), growth of the capital-labor ratio and growth of Total Factor Productivity (TFP). We bring the decomposition to the data using international countrysectoral information spanning from the 1960s to the 2000s and a nonparametric generalized kernel method, which enables us to estimate the production function allowing for heterogeneity across all relevant dimensions: countries, sectors and time. As well as documenting substantial heterogeneity across countries and sectors, we nd average TEP to account for about 44% of labor productivity growth and TEP gaps with respect to the…

Counterfactual thinkingEconomics and EconometricsPublic economics05 social sciencesConvergence (economics)Oecd countriesjel:C14jel:D24Aggregate productivityjel:O41Capital accumulationTFP Aggregate productivity Technology Nonparametric estimation Convergence0502 economics and businessEconometricsEconomics050207 economicsjel:O47Settore SECS-P/01 - Economia PoliticaProductivityTotal factor productivity050205 econometrics Under Review [TFP Aggregate Productivity Technology Nonparametric Estimation Convergence Publication Status]
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Trade in final goods and the impact of innovation

2011

Abstract This paper analyses how innovations in imported final goods impact via terms of trade effects upon welfare growth in the domestic economy. It is shown that the impacts, although differing across countries, are quantitatively significant and worthy of further consideration.

Economic integrationMacroeconomicsEconomics and EconometricsTotal factor productivity growthmedia_common.quotation_subjectEconomicsInternational economicsTerms of tradeTrade barrierWelfareFinancemedia_commonEconomics Letters
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Unbundling technology adoption and tfp at the firm level. Do intangibles matter?

2012

We use a panel of European firms to investigate the relationship between intangible assets and productivity. We distinguish between total factor productivity (tfp) and technology adoption, whereas standard estimations consider only a notion of productivity that conflates the two effects. Although we are unable to address simultaneity, we allow for the existence of multiple technologies within sectors through a mixture model approach. We find that intangible assets have nonnegligible effects that both push firms toward better technologies (technology adoption effects) and allow for more efficient exploitation of a given technology (tfp effects).

Economics and Econometricintangible assetsSimultaneityfirm selectionTFP Intangible Assets Heterogeneity Firm Selection Technology Adoption Mixture Modelstechnology adoptionjel:D24jel:F12Strategy and Management1409 Tourism Leisure and Hospitality ManagementTFPjel:C29TFP intangible assets firm heterogeneity firm selection technology adoption mixture modelsfirm heterogeneityManagement of Technology and Innovationmixture models;tfp;intangible assets;firm heterogeneity;firm selection;technology adoptionEconomicsjel:O32Business Management and Accounting (all)Unbundlingmixture modelsSettore SECS-P/01 - Economia PoliticaProductivityTotal factor productivityIndustrial organization
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Complementarities in innovation strategy: do intangibles play a role in enhancing firm performance?

2017

This article assesses the role of investments in intangible capital and their potential complementarities as a way to improve firm productivity. We focus on the three intangible resources that, according to the literature, have the greatest strategic importance: research and development (R & D), advertising, and human capital. To test our hypotheses, we use a large sample of Spanish manufacturing firms and consider estimates of total factor productivity through a generalized method of moments approach. Our results show evidence of complementarities between R & D and advertising investments and between advertising and human capital. However, they are not conclusive in the case of R & D and h…

Economics and Econometrics05 social sciencesHuman capitalLarge sampleCapital (economics)0502 economics and businessEconomicsManufacturing firms050207 economicsProductivityTotal factor productivity050203 business & managementIndustrial organizationGeneralized method of momentsIndustrial and Corporate Change
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Foreign sourcing and exporting

2020

The aim in this paper is analysing the role of sourcing intermediate inputs internationally on export decisions, distinguishing whether intermediate are sourced from firms belonging to the same business group or from independent suppliers. To analyse firm’s export decision, we use a specification that also accounts for sunk costs and the accumulated experience in export markets (i.e., foreign markets learning). We consider that importing intermediates might have direct and indirect effects (operating through productivity) on the export participation decision. The direct effects on exporting are isolated once we control for productivity and the effects of belonging to an international group.…

Economics and Econometrics050208 finance05 social sciencesControl (management)Direct effectsForeign direct investmentCorporate groupAccounting0502 economics and businessPolitical Science and International RelationsEconomicsProduct (category theory)050207 economicsProductivityTotal factor productivityFinanceIndustrial organizationSunk costsThe World Economy
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The devil is in the details : Capital stock estimation and aggregate productivity growth : an application to the Spanish economy

2020

The variables that contribute to explaining the major puzzles and paradoxes in macroeconomics and economic growth literature always appear related, directly or indirectly, to capital stock and depreciation. Depreciation defined in a narrow sense refers only to physical wear and tear, but in a broader sense, it also includes economic deterioration and obsolescence. In this study, we explore the link between these two depreciation concepts, the capital deepening and total factor productivity (TFP) growth. We propose a double growth accounting framework that allows us to establish a relationship between variables in statistical terms and variables in economic terms. Then, with Spanish data for…

Economics and Econometrics050208 financecapitalDepreciation05 social sciencesDepreciationUNESCO::CIENCIAS ECONÓMICASMonetary economicsGrowth accountingCapitalInvestment (macroeconomics)depreciationTFPslowdownCapital (economics)Capital deepeningICTSlowdown0502 economics and businessEconomicsCapital intensity050207 economicsGeneral Economics Econometrics and FinanceProductivityTotal factor productivity
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