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1 – 3 of 3Eucabeth Majiwa, Boon Lee, Jonas Månsson and Clevo Wilson
In this study, the impact of owner-operator and non-owner operator rice mills on productive efficiency is investigated.
Abstract
Purpose
In this study, the impact of owner-operator and non-owner operator rice mills on productive efficiency is investigated.
Design/methodology/approach
Primary data collected from a survey of 111 rice mills in the Mwea region of Kenya are used. A metafrontier approach is employed to measure overall technical efficiency which is decomposed into managerial and organisational efficiency.
Findings
The results reveal no significant difference in overall technical and managerial efficiency between owner and non-owner operated mills. However, a significant difference exists in organisational efficiency of mills: non-owner operated mills were found to be performing significantly better than owner-operated.
Practical implications
The authors provide supporting evidence to the study and discuss some of the significant policy implications stemming from the study.
Originality/value
It is recognised that for owners to take the risk of divesting control to a hired manager rather than manage the firm themselves can have major strategic, financial and often emotional consequences. However, there is little empirical evidence on how production efficiency will develop as a result of hiring a manager with the underlying economic theory providing ambiguous guidance. Standard economic theory assumes that firms behave as profit maximisers, which can be achieved by operating efficiently. However, this may not always be the case and as the literature indicates, this may especially be so for small businesses in low- and middle-income countries.
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Federico Brunetti, Angelo Bonfanti, Andrea Chiarini and Virginia Vannucci
This paper explores how digitalization affects the academic research publication process by taking into account the perspective of management scholars. It provides an overview of…
Abstract
Purpose
This paper explores how digitalization affects the academic research publication process by taking into account the perspective of management scholars. It provides an overview of the digital professional services dedicated to academic research, and investigates academics' awareness of, the impact on the publication process of, and scholars' expectations regarding digital services and software.
Design/methodology/approach
This explorative study adopted a qualitative approach by performing direct observations of websites regarding digital professional research services and in-depth interviews with national and international management scholars.
Findings
The multiple digital professional services dedicated to academic research enable authors to develop a scientific paper independently or with the support of professionals. The scholars' awareness regarding the digital services and software was limited, because of both the plethora of options on the market and the frequent use of the same digital tools over time. In impact terms, these tools enable scholars to improve research quality and to increase productivity. However, the negative effects led scholars to express different expectations about how they can be improved and what difficulties should be overcome to favor the publication process.
Practical implications
The results of this study provide suggestions both for scholars who engage in academic research and digital services and software providers.
Originality/value
To the best of the authors' knowledge, this is the first study to examine the ongoing development of digitalization in support of the research publication process from the perspective of academics.
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Jose F. Baños, Ana Rodriguez-Alvarez and Patricia Suarez-Cano
This paper aims to model the efficiency of labour offices belonging to the public employment services (PESs) in Spain using a stochastic matching frontier approach.
Abstract
Purpose
This paper aims to model the efficiency of labour offices belonging to the public employment services (PESs) in Spain using a stochastic matching frontier approach.
Design/methodology/approach
With this aim in mind, the authors apply a random parameter model approach to control for observed and unobserved heterogeneity.
Findings
Results indicate that when the information criteria of the estimates are analysed, it improves by controlling both, observed and unobserved heterogeneity in the inefficiency term. Also, results suggest that counsellors improve the productivity of labour offices and that the share of unemployed skilled persons, unemployed persons aged 44 or younger, as well as the share of unemployed persons in the construction sector, all affect the technical efficiency of PESs offices.
Originality/value
The model extends the previous specifications in the matching literature that capture only observed heterogeneity. Moreover, as far as the authors know, it is the first paper that estimates a matching frontier for the Spanish case. Finally, the database they use is at the office level and includes the work carried out by counsellors, which is a novelty in the analysis of this type of studies at the Spanish level.
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