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Article
An Econometric Look at Inefficiency Among US States, 1977-1986
Review of Regional Studies
  • Gregory J. Brock, Georgia Southern University
Document Type
Article
Publication Date
1-1-2001
Abstract

U.S. states during the 1977-1986 business cycle are found to have small but significant technical inefficiency in the private sector. Inefficiency is influenced by several factors, including prior economic performance, location, Hicks labor augmenting technical progress in the manufacturing sector in an earlier 1970s period, college graduation, and income inequality. The existence of a monetary channel, urban agglomeration, and a high school diploma "sheepskin" effect for improved technical efficiency are rejected. Results from earlier studies using noneconometric methods to measure technical efficiency are independently confirmed, indicating that interstate technical inefficiency exists and can be measured using both parametric and nonparametric methods, but may overestimate how different states are from each other.

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Article originally published and obtained from the Review of Regional Studies.

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Citation Information
Gregory J. Brock. "An Econometric Look at Inefficiency Among US States, 1977-1986" Review of Regional Studies Vol. 31 Iss. 1 (2001) p. 95 - 107 ISSN: 1553-0892
Available at: http://works.bepress.com/gregory_brock/68/