Determining the contribution of technical change, efficiency change and scale change to productivity growth in the privatized English and Welsh water and sewerage industry: 1985–2000

Springer Science and Business Media LLC - Tập 28 - Trang 127-139 - 2007
David S. Saal1, David Parker2, Tom Weyman-Jones3
1Economics and Strategy Group & Centre for Perfomance Measurement and Management, Aston Business School, Birmingham, UK
2Cranfield Centre for Competition and Regulation Research, Cranfield University School of Management, Cranfield, UK
3Department of Economics, Loughborough University, Loughborough, UK

Tóm tắt

The water and sewerage industry of England and Wales was privatized in 1989 and subjected to a new regime of environmental, water quality and RPI+K price cap regulation. This paper estimates a quality-adjusted input distance function, with stochastic frontier techniques in order to estimate productivity growth rates for the period 1985–2000. Productivity is decomposed so as to account for the impact of technical change, efficiency change, and scale change. Compared with earlier studies by Saal and Parker [(2000) Managerial Decision Econ 21(6):253–268, (2001) J Regul Econ 20(1): 61–90], these estimates allow a more careful consideration of how and whether privatization and the new regulatory regime affected productivity growth in the industry. Strikingly, they suggest that while technical change improved after privatization, productivity growth did not improve, and this was attributable to efficiency losses as firms appear to have struggled to keep up with technical advances after privatization. Moreover, the results also suggest that the excessive scale of the WaSCs contributed negatively to productivity growth.

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