Efficiency and ownership with reference to British ports

This study seeks to investigate the empirical basis for the hypothesis, arising from the economics literature, that public enterprises are inherently less efficient than private enterprises, with reference to British ports which provide a comprehensive "laboratory" of mixed—ownership enter...

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Main Author: Liu, Zinan
Published: Queen Mary, University of London 1992
Subjects:
658
Online Access:https://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.294918
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spelling ndltd-bl.uk-oai-ethos.bl.uk-2949182019-02-27T03:25:25ZEfficiency and ownership with reference to British portsLiu, Zinan1992This study seeks to investigate the empirical basis for the hypothesis, arising from the economics literature, that public enterprises are inherently less efficient than private enterprises, with reference to British ports which provide a comprehensive "laboratory" of mixed—ownership enterprises. The relative productive efficiency of public ports vis—a—vis private ports is evaluated in terms of efficiency frontiers of the industry at a fairly high degree of rigour. By applying the techniques of efficiency measurement the various ways that a British port producer might depart from overall productive efficiency were systematically explored. These include: production on the interior of the production possibilities set; production in the congested region of the boundary of the production possibilities set; and deviation from the scale that arises from the long—run competitive equilibrium. As well as static productive performance, productive performance relative to dynamic production frontiers is also the subject of investigation. Both mathematical programming techniques and econometric techniques are employed. To fulfil the tasks in the empirical analysis, the econometric approach has been enhanced in two ways. First, a less restrictive structure of production technology is specified in estimating efficiency frontiers in order to define parametric measures in a more meaningful way. Second, Solow's (1957) measure of productivity growth is reconsidered in a context of stochastic frontier functions, which enables us to translate efficiency gains over time into a movement towards frontiers and a movement of the frontiers. As far as British ports are concerned we found no evidence for believing the inefficiency associated with public ownership to be unavoidable. The results cast serious doubt on the transformation in productive performance brought about by the port privatisation programme.658EconomicsQueen Mary, University of Londonhttps://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.294918http://qmro.qmul.ac.uk/xmlui/handle/123456789/1534Electronic Thesis or Dissertation
collection NDLTD
sources NDLTD
topic 658
Economics
spellingShingle 658
Economics
Liu, Zinan
Efficiency and ownership with reference to British ports
description This study seeks to investigate the empirical basis for the hypothesis, arising from the economics literature, that public enterprises are inherently less efficient than private enterprises, with reference to British ports which provide a comprehensive "laboratory" of mixed—ownership enterprises. The relative productive efficiency of public ports vis—a—vis private ports is evaluated in terms of efficiency frontiers of the industry at a fairly high degree of rigour. By applying the techniques of efficiency measurement the various ways that a British port producer might depart from overall productive efficiency were systematically explored. These include: production on the interior of the production possibilities set; production in the congested region of the boundary of the production possibilities set; and deviation from the scale that arises from the long—run competitive equilibrium. As well as static productive performance, productive performance relative to dynamic production frontiers is also the subject of investigation. Both mathematical programming techniques and econometric techniques are employed. To fulfil the tasks in the empirical analysis, the econometric approach has been enhanced in two ways. First, a less restrictive structure of production technology is specified in estimating efficiency frontiers in order to define parametric measures in a more meaningful way. Second, Solow's (1957) measure of productivity growth is reconsidered in a context of stochastic frontier functions, which enables us to translate efficiency gains over time into a movement towards frontiers and a movement of the frontiers. As far as British ports are concerned we found no evidence for believing the inefficiency associated with public ownership to be unavoidable. The results cast serious doubt on the transformation in productive performance brought about by the port privatisation programme.
author Liu, Zinan
author_facet Liu, Zinan
author_sort Liu, Zinan
title Efficiency and ownership with reference to British ports
title_short Efficiency and ownership with reference to British ports
title_full Efficiency and ownership with reference to British ports
title_fullStr Efficiency and ownership with reference to British ports
title_full_unstemmed Efficiency and ownership with reference to British ports
title_sort efficiency and ownership with reference to british ports
publisher Queen Mary, University of London
publishDate 1992
url https://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.294918
work_keys_str_mv AT liuzinan efficiencyandownershipwithreferencetobritishports
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