Abstract

PurposeThis study aims to unlock the path of growth for sustainable economic development and accomplish the government's vision 2030 by ameliorating the productivity of the manufacturing sector in Laos.Design/methodology/approachThis study applied cross-sectional data of 2,009 firms from the national firm survey, namely the Economic Census Survey (ECS), in 2012/13 in addition to employing the stochastic frontier analysis (SFA) to assess the production frontier and factors behind the technical inefficiency to arrive at policy recommendations.FindingsThe study found that the efficiency level varied across subindustries with an average of 72.51% in full potential production. Out of the five classified groups, Sub4 (chemical and plastic) was found to be the most efficient manufacturer, while the rest in order are Sub1 (food and beverage), Sub5 (furniture and others), Sub2 (garment and textile), and Sub3 (paper and printing), providing the evidence to improve the technical efficiency. This study discovered that the firm's size, accounting system and credit access are crucial to enhancing the production efficiency of all sampling firms. However, these factors might be subject to specific industries.Practical implicationsFor the implication to the business community and policymakers, the findings of this study could be a reference in terms of which areas they should concentrate on to improve the technical efficiency as a part of productivity in the manufacturing industry. For instance, it suggests that firms could improve their production efficiency by introducing the accounting system, laborers' skills (education of managers) and engaging in international trade activities. Additionally, it asks policymakers to help private firms by improving the infrastructure, credit access, training and trade facilitation.Originality/valueIt is believed that, as the major contribution in Lao literature, this study is the first research applying the largest data from the national survey – the Lao ECS – examining the technical efficiency in the manufacturing sector in the country, and overcoming the gap of the previous research which recruited few policy variables and applied a small sample size in one specific industry. Therefore, the findings of this study impart more insights into the analysis, providing more effective and credible recommendations to policymakers and firms to improve their technical efficiency and, consequently, their competitiveness.

Highlights

  • Over the last two decades, the economies of certain low-income countries in Asia – such as China, India, Thailand and Indonesia – have witnessed rapid growth and a subsequent increase in their income per capita, propelling them into the list of higher-income countries, as highlighted by the Asian Development Bank (2017)

  • This study applied cross-sectional data from the national firm survey, namely the Economic Census Survey (ECS), in 2012/13 in addition to employing the stochastic frontier analysis (SFA) to assess the production frontier and factors behind the technical inefficiency to arrive at policy recommendations

  • The labor productivity of the resource sector is extremely high, distorting the measurement of national labor productivity as well as the income per capita. Under this resource-led growth, the Lao economy is unsustainable in terms of the income distribution, limited stock of resources and easy exposure to external shocks such as varying commodity prices

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Over the last two decades, the economies of certain low-income countries in Asia – such as China, India, Thailand and Indonesia – have witnessed rapid growth and a subsequent increase in their income per capita, propelling them into the list of higher-income countries, as highlighted by the Asian Development Bank (2017). The high record of economic growth has been predominantly attributed to capital investment and productivity growth. Published in Journal of Asian Business and Economic Studies. The full terms of this licence may be seen at http://creativecommons.org/licences/by/4.0/ legalcode

Objectives
Methods
Findings
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call