Applying Statistical Methods to Compare Frontiers: Are Organic Dairy Farms Better Than the Conventional?
Mette Asmild (),
Dorte Kronborg and
Anders Rsønn-Nielsen
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Mette Asmild: University of Copenhagen
Dorte Kronborg: Copenhagen Business School
Anders Rsønn-Nielsen: Copenhagen Business School
A chapter in Advances in Efficiency and Productivity Analysis, 2021, pp 335-348 from Springer
Abstract:
Abstract The Malmquist index is widely used in empirical studies of productivity change over time. The index is based on estimates of the frontier obtained from the convex envelopment of the data as in DEA. The statistical properties of the Malmquist index and its components, i.e. the frontier shift and the efficiency change, have until recently only been subject to a limited number of studies. The asymptotic properties of the geometric mean of the individual Malmquist indexes have been studied in the literature. Permutation tests for performing statistical inference in finite samples have recently been proposed and are easily performed. In the present paper we illustrate the permutation methods by an analysis of data comprising organic and conventional dairy farms in Denmark from 2011–2015. Further, differences between the frontiers of the production possibility sets for two separate samples are studied, specifically those of the organic and the conventional producers. We suggest to use jackknife methods when estimating the differences to ensure that these are not affected by the well-known bias originating from estimation of the frontier. In summary, the paper offers an illustration of how to analyse productivity data, in particular a comparison of two independent groups, and furthermore an analysis of how the separate groups evolve over time is provided.
Keywords: Malmquist index; Frontier differences; Data envelopment analysis (DEA); Independent samples; Permutation tests; Organic farming (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 2021
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Persistent link: https://EconPapers.repec.org/RePEc:spr:prbchp:978-3-030-47106-4_14
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DOI: 10.1007/978-3-030-47106-4_14
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