open access publication

Article, 2023

A ray-based input distance function to model zero-valued output quantities: Derivation and an empirical application

Journal of Productivity Analysis, ISSN 0895-562X, 1573-0441, Volume 60, 2, Pages 179-188, 10.1007/s11123-023-00684-1

Contributors

Price, Juan Jose' 0000-0002-8342-3337 (Corresponding author) [1] Henningsen, Arne 0000-0002-6720-0264 [2]

Affiliations

  1. [1] Adolfo Ibáñez University
  2. [NORA names: Chile; America, South; OECD];
  3. [2] University of Copenhagen
  4. [NORA names: KU University of Copenhagen; University; Denmark; Europe, EU; Nordic; OECD]

Abstract

We derive and empirically apply an input-oriented distance function based on the stochastic ray production function suggested by Löthgren (1997, 2000). We show that the derived ray-based input distance function is suitable for modeling production technologies based on logarithmic functional forms (e.g., Cobb-Douglas and Translog) when control over inputs is greater than control over outputs and when some productive entities do not produce the entire set of outputs — two situations that are jointly present in various economic sectors. We also address a weakness of the stochastic ray function, namely its sensitivity to the outputs’ ordering, by using a model-selection approach and a model-averaging approach. We estimate a ray-based Translog input distance function with a data set of Danish museums. These museums have more control over their inputs than over their outputs, and many of them do not produce the entire set of outputs that is considered in our analysis. Given the importance of monotonicity conditions in efficiency analysis, we demonstrate how to impose monotonicity on ray-based input distance functions. As part of the empirical analysis, we estimate technical efficiencies, distance elasticities of the inputs and outputs, and scale elasticities and establish how the production frontier is affected by some environmental variables that are of interest to the museum sector.

Keywords

Danish museums, analysis, applications, approach, conditions, control, data, data sets, derivatives, distance, distance elasticity, distance function, economic sectors, efficiency, efficiency analysis, elasticity, empirical analysis, empirical application, entities, environmental variables, estimate technical efficiency, form, frontier, function, functional form, input, input distance function, input-oriented distance function, logarithmic functional form, model production technology, model selection approach, model-averaging approach, monotonicity, monotonicity condition, museum, museum sector, order, output, output order, output quantities, production, production entities, production frontier, production function, production technology, quantity, ray functions, ray production function, scale, scale elasticity, sector, sensitivity, situation, technical efficiency, technology, translog, translog input distance function, variables, weakness

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