Efficiency, Technical Progress, and Best Practice in Chinese State Enterprises (1980-1994)
Abstract
In spite of rapid economic growth and swift structural change during the last two decades, China's industrial reform is far from complete, especially with regard to state enterprises (SOEs). Although troubled with huge financial losses, heavy debt, and substantial over-staffing, SOEs will continue to play a crucial part in the government policy to maintain social stability and economic growth in China. This study, based on samples of about 700 state enterprises during 1980-94, investigates productivity performance of the SOEs using Data Envelopment Analysis and Malmquist Index. Our empirical results show that average technical efficiency had been low among the sample SOEs. Considerable productivity growth was found, but it was mainly accomplished through technical progress rather than efficiency improvement. Regression analyses indicate that wage incentives and education had positive impacts on productivity growth, while large scale was an important determinant of whether an SOE was applying best practice technology. It is also shown that large SOEs were more likely to generate technical progress. These findings are consistent with the industrial structural adjustment program initiated by the government in 1994, which has focused on improving productive efficiency via redundancies and technology upgrading, and on building its best SOEs into conglomerates
University
Göteborg University. School of Business, Economics and Law
Collections
View/ Open
Date
2000Author
Bigsten, Arne
Liu, Xiaxuan
Zheng, Jinghai
Keywords
Efficiency; productivity; technical progress; state enterprises; reform
Publication type
Report
ISSN
1403-2465
Series/Report no.
Working Papers in Economics, nr 30
Language
en