Accounting for externalities and disposability: A directional economic environmental distance function

Citation:

Nicole Adler and Volta, Nicola . 2016. “Accounting For Externalities And Disposability: A Directional Economic Environmental Distance Function”. European Journal Of Operational Research, 250, 1, Pp. 314–327.

Abstract:

The existence of positive and negative externalities ought to be considered in a productivity analysis in order to obtain unbiased measures of efficiency. In this research we present an additive style, data envelopment analysis model that considers the production of both negative and positive externalities and permits a limited increase in input utilisation where relevant. The directional economic environmental distance (DEED) function is a unified approach based on a linear program that evaluates the relative inefficiency of the units under examination with respect to a unique reference technology. We discuss the impact of disposability assumptions in depth and demonstrate how different versions of the DEED model improve on models presented in the literature to date.
Last updated on 08/07/2018