23 research outputs found

    Decomposing efficiency into its managerial and its regulatory components: The case of European railways

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    The purpose of this paper is to decompose traditional measures of productive efficiency into a management and a regulatory component. This procedure is applied to European railways. The policy implication of such a decomposition is obvious: management is responsible for just managerial inefficiency whereas governments are responsible for slacks in regulatory efficiency. Regulatory efficiency is based on indicators pertaining to managerial freedom in pricing, hiring and marketing decisions

    Technical efficiency of European railways: a distance function approach

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    This study has two principal objectives. The first objective is to measure and compare the performance of European railways. The second objective is to illustrate the usefulness of econometric distance functions in the analysis of production in multioutput industries, where behavioural assumptions such as cost minimization or profit maximization, are unlikely to be applicable. Using annual data on 17 railways companies during 1988–1993, multioutput distance functions are estimated using corrected ordinary least squares (COLS). The resulting technical efficiency estimates range from 0.980 for the Netherlands to 0.784 for Italy, with a mean of 0.863. The distance function results are also compared with those obtained from single-output production functions, where aggregate output measures are formed using either total revenue or a Tornqvist index. The results obtained indicate substantial differences in parameter estimates and technical efficiency rankings, casting significant doubt upon the reliability of these single-output models, particularly when a total revenue measure is used to proxy aggregate output.
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