PRODUCTIVITY IN THE PULP AND PAPER INDUSTRIES OF THE UNITED-STATES AND CANADA - A NONPARAMETRIC ANALYSIS

Citation
Js. Hseu et J. Buongiorno, PRODUCTIVITY IN THE PULP AND PAPER INDUSTRIES OF THE UNITED-STATES AND CANADA - A NONPARAMETRIC ANALYSIS, Canadian journal of forest research, 24(12), 1994, pp. 2353-2361
Citations number
26
Categorie Soggetti
Forestry
ISSN journal
00455067
Volume
24
Issue
12
Year of publication
1994
Pages
2353 - 2361
Database
ISI
SICI code
0045-5067(1994)24:12<2353:PITPAP>2.0.ZU;2-D
Abstract
Partial and total measures of factor productivity are presented for th e pulp and paper industries of the United States and Canada, from 1959 to 1987. Total factor productivity was measured with (1) a Tornqvist- Theil index, (2) a nonparametric index with translating hypothesis, an d (3) a nonparametric index with distance functions. Method 1 implied a constant return to scale translog production function. Methods 2 and 3 removed any assumption on the functional form of the production fun ction. Furthermore, method 3 allowed for fully disaggregated outputs. Methods 1 and 3 gave similar results within countries: an increase in total factor productivity of 0.7% per year in the United States and of 0.5% per year in Canada. Method 2 gave rates of growth of total facto r productivity that were twice as high, but unreliable because of the assumptions of the method. From 1961 to 1984, when comparable data are available, methods 1 and 3 gave growth rates of total factor producti vity that were significantly higher, statistically, in the United Stat es than in Canada. Nevertheless, the differences seem to be too small to be of economic significance.