2011-08: Efficiency, technology, and productivity change in Australian urban water utilities (Working paper)

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Author(s)
Worthington, Andrew C.
Griffith University Author(s)
Year published
2011
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In this paper, we investigate productivity growth in 55 major Australian urban water utilities using nonparametric frontier techniques over the period 2005/06 to 2008/09. The five outputs included in the analysis are chemical and microbiological compliance, and the inverses of real losses per connection, the number of water main breaks per 100 km of water main, and water quality and service complaints per 1,000 properties. The input is operating expenditure. Using Malmquist indices, we decompose productivity growth into technical efficiency and technological change. The results indicate that annual productivity growth averaged ...
View more >In this paper, we investigate productivity growth in 55 major Australian urban water utilities using nonparametric frontier techniques over the period 2005/06 to 2008/09. The five outputs included in the analysis are chemical and microbiological compliance, and the inverses of real losses per connection, the number of water main breaks per 100 km of water main, and water quality and service complaints per 1,000 properties. The input is operating expenditure. Using Malmquist indices, we decompose productivity growth into technical efficiency and technological change. The results indicate that annual productivity growth averaged 1.04 percent across all utilities and was largely attributable to efficiency gain, roughly equally split between pure technical efficiency and gains from scale. As in many other highly regulated Australian industries, technological improvements during this period are very small, averaging just 0.22 percent a year. We subsequently employ second-stage regression analysis to quantify the effects of uncontrollable (nondiscretionary) factors on total factor productivity and efficiency change, including the role of different water sources (surface, ground, recycled and bulk water purchases) and utility size. The results indicate that imposed environmental factors only account for a small percentage of the observed variation in efficiency, technology change, and productivity improvements.
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View more >In this paper, we investigate productivity growth in 55 major Australian urban water utilities using nonparametric frontier techniques over the period 2005/06 to 2008/09. The five outputs included in the analysis are chemical and microbiological compliance, and the inverses of real losses per connection, the number of water main breaks per 100 km of water main, and water quality and service complaints per 1,000 properties. The input is operating expenditure. Using Malmquist indices, we decompose productivity growth into technical efficiency and technological change. The results indicate that annual productivity growth averaged 1.04 percent across all utilities and was largely attributable to efficiency gain, roughly equally split between pure technical efficiency and gains from scale. As in many other highly regulated Australian industries, technological improvements during this period are very small, averaging just 0.22 percent a year. We subsequently employ second-stage regression analysis to quantify the effects of uncontrollable (nondiscretionary) factors on total factor productivity and efficiency change, including the role of different water sources (surface, ground, recycled and bulk water purchases) and utility size. The results indicate that imposed environmental factors only account for a small percentage of the observed variation in efficiency, technology change, and productivity improvements.
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Copyright © 2010 by author(s). No part of this paper may be reproduced in any form, or stored in a retrieval system, without prior permission of the author(s).
Note
Economics and Business Statistics
Subject
D24 - Production; Cost; Capital, Total Factor, and Multifactor Productivity; Capacity
C61 - Optimization Techniques; Programming Models; Dynamic Analysis
L95 - Gas Utilities; Pipelines; Water Utilities
Productivity
technical and scale efficiency
technological progress
Malmquist indices
urban water utilties