Title: Efficiency Effects of Quality of Service and Environmental Factors: Experience from Norwegian Electricity Distribution
Authors: Growitsch, Christian
Jamasb, Tooraj
Wetzel, Heike
Keywords: Efficiency
Quality of service
Input distance function
Stochastic frontier analysis
Issue Date: Sep-2010
Publisher: Faculty of Economics
Series/Report no.: CWPE
1050
Abstract: Since the 1990s, efficiency and benchmarking analysis has increasingly been used in network utilities research and regulation. A recurrent concern is the effect of environmental factors that are beyond the influence of firms (observable heterogeneity) and factors that are not identifiable (unobserved heterogeneity) on measured cost and quality performance of firms. This paper analyses the effect of geographic and weather factors and unobserved heterogeneity on a set of 128 Norwegian electricity distribution utilities for the 2001-2004 period. We utilize data on almost 100 geographic and weather variables to identify real economic inefficiency while controlling for observable and unobserved heterogeneity. We use the factor analysis technique to reduce the number of environmental factors into few composite variables and to avoid the problem of multi-collinearity. We then estimate the established stochastic frontier models of Battese and Coelli (1992; 1995) and the recent true fixed effects models of Greene (2004; 2005) without and with environmental variables. In the former models some composite environmental variables have a significant effect on the performance of utilities. These effects vanish in the true fixed effects models. However, the latter models capture the entire unobserved heterogeneity and therefore show significantly higher average efficiency scores.
URI: http://www.dspace.cam.ac.uk/handle/1810/242075
Appears in Collections:Cambridge Working Papers in Economics

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