Has Low Productivity Constrained Competitiveness of African Firms? : Comparison of the Firm Performances with Asian Firms


Autoria(s): Fukunishi, Takahiro
Data(s)

28/12/2007

28/12/2007

01/12/2007

Resumo

It has been argued that poor productive performance is one of critical sources of stagnation of the African manufacturing sector, but firm-level empirical supports are limited. Using the inter-regional firm data of the garment industry, technical efficiency and its contribution to competitiveness measured as unit costs were compared between Kenyan and Bangladeshi firms. Our estimates indicated that there is no significant gap in the average technical efficiency of the two industries despite conservative estimation, although unit costs greatly differ between the two industries. Higher unit cost in Kenyan firms mainly stems from high labour cost, while impact of inefficiency is quite small. Productivity accounts little for the stagnation of garment industry in several African countries.

Identificador

IDE Discussion Paper. No. 129. 2007.12

http://hdl.handle.net/2344/699

IDE Discussion Paper

129

Idioma(s)

en

eng

Publicador

Institute of Developing Economies, JETRO

日本貿易振興機構アジア経済研究所

Palavras-Chave #Technical efficiency #Allocative efficiency #Manufacturing #Sub-Saharan Africa #Productivity #Manufacturing industries #Kenya #Bangladesh #技術効率 #配分効率 #サハラ以南アフリカ #生産性 #製造業 #ケニア #バングラデシュ #336.2 #ASBG Bangladesh バングラデシュ #F Africa アフリカ #FEKE Kenya ケニア #D24 - Production; #L67 - Other Consumer Nondurables: #O33 - Technological Change: Choices and Consequences; Diffusion Processes #338.011
Tipo

Working Paper

Technical Report