Abstract
The purpose of this paper is to introduce a general methodology for analysing the sources of intertemporal or interspatial differences in outputs and costs, general in the sense that our methodology allows the productivity analyst to ‘break out’ of the quadratic ‘straightjacket’ imposed by the class of superlative index number comparisons. Starting fromTaylor's series expansions about the two points to be compared, we develop a general growth accounting equation which can be approximated to any desired degree of accuracy, depending on the information available. The theoretical framework is applied to two recent examples of interspatial comparisons which use the Tornqvist superlative index. In the first example, we show that the biases in regional Canadian total manufacturing cost-efficiency comparisons which result from the use of this index are negligible. However, in the second example, it is shown that the Tornqvist index imparts a substantial bias in United States-Japan total domestic economy productivity comparisons. The index consistently overestimates the relative productivitylevel of the U.S. economy and misses the turning point, when the Japanese economy becomes more efficient, by two years.
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