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A productivity study of the Norwegian building industry

✍ Scribed by Rolf O. Albriktsen; Finn R. Førsund


Publisher
Springer
Year
1990
Tongue
English
Weight
705 KB
Volume
2
Category
Article
ISSN
0895-562X

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✦ Synopsis


Slow productivity growth in the building and construction industry is often put forward as the cause of rising building costs. In view of the importance of the building sector in the national economy, factual empirical knowledge is hard to come by. The few studies found are usually carried out on a sectoral level and based on time-series data. However, to come to grips with the real causes for slow productivity growth, one has to analyze at the microlevel of actual decision making. Our study is based on establishment data for 1986. The method of analysis is the deterministic frontier approach. The efficiency distributions show large variations with average structural efficiency about 20 percent. Thus, there is significant scope for productivity improvement if average performance can catch up with best practice.


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