Article ID: | iaor19981238 |
Country: | Netherlands |
Volume: | 80 |
Issue: | 3 |
Start Page Number: | 672 |
End Page Number: | 690 |
Publication Date: | Feb 1995 |
Journal: | European Journal of Operational Research |
Authors: | Stolp Chandler, Bannister Geoffrey J. |
Keywords: | statistics: data envelopment analysis, programming: linear |
This paper explores the link between industrial location, concentration, and economic efficiency in Mexican manufacturing. Using a linear programming approach, the authors calculate indices of overall, technical, allocative, and scale efficiency for Mexican manufacturing industries by state to test whether, in 1985, those regions with high levels of industrial concentration were suffering from the costs of congestion. The evidence suggests that, at least at the aggregate level, there continued to be a positive relationship between industry concentration and efficiency in production. There is also evidence that overall efficiency was related to scale efficiency, although highly industrialized regions on the production frontier often operated at inefficient scales. In particular, the most concentrated regions (the Federal District, the state of Mexico, Jalisco, and Nuevo León) consistently display decreasing returns to scale, indicating that the process of industrial concentration may be leading to diseconomies of scale. Finally, an econometric analysis suggests that scale, urbanization, and agglomeration economies are positively related to overall and technical efficiency at the regional level, while foreign ownership is negatively related. Agglomeration economies at the industry level were not significant. The paper also makes a methodological contribution. It is the first application of a distance-function production methodology to measuring regional efficiency in a developing country. It demonstrates how to conduct distance-function efficiency analysis using the newly developed GAMS mathematical programming environment. These tools should be of considerable interest to applied microeconomists.