Abstract

Data envelopment analysis (DEA) can be interpreted as a natural generalization of elemental practices for efficiency and performance evaluation used in diverse areas, some of which have evolved independently of each other and of the traditional efficiency framework of Charnes et al. [Measuring the efficiency of decision making units. European Journal of Operational Research 1978;2(6):429–44]. The paper aims to show that some standard “real-world” procedures employed by practitioners in the fields of retailing, finance, and social science can be interpreted as unconscious applications of DEA, and that such analyses could be enhanced by the explicit use of DEA. A supplementary aim is to demonstrate that DEA can be derived from concrete examples and first principles. The choice of the examples covers the two typical returns to scale environments of constant returns to scale (CRS) and variable returns to scale (VRS). Motivating and deriving DEA as a generalization of established performance evaluation practices will help to explain and disseminate this methodology to practitioners and to those who find their methods familiar.

Full Text
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