Elasticities of substitution and functional separability of the maquiladora industry

<span>Previous studies about the demand of productive factors of the Maquiladora Industry have focused in the labor demand. Such literature has advanced in two directions: specifying dynamic models of labor demand; or deriving the demand of productive factors from production functions that ass...

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Main Authors: Jorge Ibarra Salazar, Francisco García Pérez
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Universidad Autonoma de Baja California 2013-07-01
Series:Estudios Fronterizos
Subjects:
Online Access:http://ref.uabc.mx/ojs/index.php/ref/article/view/71
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spelling doaj-b57be81167ee4fee87a06e242132ba282020-11-25T01:29:36ZengUniversidad Autonoma de Baja CaliforniaEstudios Fronterizos0187-69612395-91342013-07-01142815518548Elasticities of substitution and functional separability of the maquiladora industryJorge Ibarra Salazar0Francisco García Pérez1Tecnológico de Monterrey.Tecnológico de Monterrey.<span>Previous studies about the demand of productive factors of the Maquiladora Industry have focused in the labor demand. Such literature has advanced in two directions: specifying dynamic models of labor demand; or deriving the demand of productive factors from production functions that assume constant returns to scale, functional separability or certain substitution patterns among them. In this paper we estimate a translog production function without imposing </span><em>a priori </em><span>these restrictions. Our objective is to determine whether there is evidence supporting those assumptions. In particular, we analyze the hypotheses of constant returns to scale, and the different forms of functional separability in a three inputs production function. We use data that combines annual time series (1990– 2006) with cross section of nine economic sectors of the Mexican maquiladora. We find no evidence supporting the assumptions that have been used in previous studies of factor demand. Specifically, we find evidence of decreasing returns to scale, and that the elasticities of substitution between the productive factors are all different. The estimated elasticity of substitution between labor and capital is below one; between labor and materials fluctuates between 1 and 1.5; whereas the elasticity of substitution between capital and materials is above 2.</span>http://ref.uabc.mx/ojs/index.php/ref/article/view/71Elasticidades de sustituciónrendimientos a escalaseparabilidaddemanda de factoresmaquiladora.
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Jorge Ibarra Salazar
Francisco García Pérez
spellingShingle Jorge Ibarra Salazar
Francisco García Pérez
Elasticities of substitution and functional separability of the maquiladora industry
Estudios Fronterizos
Elasticidades de sustitución
rendimientos a escala
separabilidad
demanda de factores
maquiladora.
author_facet Jorge Ibarra Salazar
Francisco García Pérez
author_sort Jorge Ibarra Salazar
title Elasticities of substitution and functional separability of the maquiladora industry
title_short Elasticities of substitution and functional separability of the maquiladora industry
title_full Elasticities of substitution and functional separability of the maquiladora industry
title_fullStr Elasticities of substitution and functional separability of the maquiladora industry
title_full_unstemmed Elasticities of substitution and functional separability of the maquiladora industry
title_sort elasticities of substitution and functional separability of the maquiladora industry
publisher Universidad Autonoma de Baja California
series Estudios Fronterizos
issn 0187-6961
2395-9134
publishDate 2013-07-01
description <span>Previous studies about the demand of productive factors of the Maquiladora Industry have focused in the labor demand. Such literature has advanced in two directions: specifying dynamic models of labor demand; or deriving the demand of productive factors from production functions that assume constant returns to scale, functional separability or certain substitution patterns among them. In this paper we estimate a translog production function without imposing </span><em>a priori </em><span>these restrictions. Our objective is to determine whether there is evidence supporting those assumptions. In particular, we analyze the hypotheses of constant returns to scale, and the different forms of functional separability in a three inputs production function. We use data that combines annual time series (1990– 2006) with cross section of nine economic sectors of the Mexican maquiladora. We find no evidence supporting the assumptions that have been used in previous studies of factor demand. Specifically, we find evidence of decreasing returns to scale, and that the elasticities of substitution between the productive factors are all different. The estimated elasticity of substitution between labor and capital is below one; between labor and materials fluctuates between 1 and 1.5; whereas the elasticity of substitution between capital and materials is above 2.</span>
topic Elasticidades de sustitución
rendimientos a escala
separabilidad
demanda de factores
maquiladora.
url http://ref.uabc.mx/ojs/index.php/ref/article/view/71
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