Explaining output growth with a heteroscedastic non-neutral production frontier: the case of sheep farms in Greece
This paper extends the primal decomposition of total factor productivity (TFP) changes to the case of non-neutral production frontiers. Output growth is decomposed into input growth (size effect), changes in technical efficiency, technical change, and the effect of returns to scale. Within the proposed formulation, however, technical efficiency changes are attributed not only to autonomous changes (i.e. passage of time) but also to changes in input use and in farm-specific characteristics. A heteroscedastic non-neutral production frontier is estimated for an unbalanced panel of Greek sheep farms for the period 1989--1992. Technical efficiency change is found to be the main source of TFP growth. The farm-specific characteristics were the most important determinant of technical efficiency changes. Copyright 2005, Oxford University Press.
Year of publication: |
2005
|
---|---|
Authors: | Karagiannis, Giannis |
Published in: |
European Review of Agricultural Economics. - European Association of Agricultural Economists - EAAE, ISSN 1464-3618. - Vol. 32.2005, 1, p. 51-74
|
Publisher: |
European Association of Agricultural Economists - EAAE |
Saved in:
Saved in favorites
Similar items by person
-
Environmental sustainability and price support under production uncertainty
Karagiannēs, Giannēs, (1998)
-
Proportional profit taxes and resource management under production uncertainty
Karagiannēs, Giannēs, (1999)
-
Karagiannēs, Giannēs, (2012)
- More ...