Decompositions of Productivity Growth into Sectoral Effects: Some Puzzles Explained.- The Dynamics of Productivity Change: A Review of the Bottom-Up Approach.- A General Error Revenue Function Model with Technical Inefficiency: An Application to Norwegian Fishing Trawler.- Production Response in the Interior of the Production Set.- Spillover Effects of Public Capital Stock using Spatial Frontier Analyses: A First Look at the Data.- Dynamic Technical Efficiency.- Analysing Labour Productivity in Ecuador.- Hierarchical performance and unobservable heterogeneity in health: A dual-level efficiency approach applied to NHS pathology in England.- Is there Evidence of ICT Skill Shortages in Canadian Taxfiler Data?.- Worker Separations and Industry Instability.- Inputs, Productivity and Agricultural Growth in Sub-Saharan Africa.- University Knowledge Spillovers and Innovative Startup Firms.- Accounting for Natural Capital in Productivity of the Mining and Oil and Gas Sector.- Balancing Incentives - The Development and Application of a Regulatory Benchmarking Model.- Limitations of the Approximation Capabilities of the Translog Model: Implications for Energy demand and Technical Change Analysis.- Bosman Ruling Implications on Player Productivity in the English Premier League.- Productivity Measurement, Model Averaging, and World Trends in Growth and Inequality.
About the Author: William Greene is a professor in the department of economics at New York University Stern School of Business. In his current positions, Professor Greene teaches courses in econometrics, statistics, and economics of the entertainment and media industries. Professor Greene has been with NYU Stern for more than 30 years. His primary research areas of interest include econometrics and applied microeconomics; productivity and production economics, health econometrics, technical change and the entertainment industry. He has published numerous articles in publications including Econometrica, Economics Letters, American Economic Review, Journal of Econometrics, Journal of Economic Education, Economics Letters, Journal of Economic Perspectives, Review of Economics and Statistics and Journal of Political Economy . Before joining NYU Stern, Professor Greene served as a consultant for the Civil Aeronautics Board in Washington, D.C. Recent consultancies also include the World Health Organization, Ortho Biotech, National Economic Research Associates, American Express, the Federal Reserve Bank, FDIC, the United States Postal Service, and regulatory authorities in the UK and Brazil. He has also held a professorial position at Cornell University and served as a visiting lecturer at the University of Oxford, University of Sydney, Curtin University, University of Lugano, University of Putra, Universities of Southern Denmark and Aarhus in Denmark, Monash University, American University
, University of Hull, Pennsylvania State University, the University of Umea, Sweden and the University of London and numerous others. Professor Greene received his Bachelor of Science in business administration from Ohio State University and his Master of Arts and Doctor of Philosophy degrees in econometrics from the University of Wisconsin, Madison.Robin C. Sickles is the Reginald Henry Hargrove Chair of Economics at Rice University. Professor Sickles received his Ph.D at th
e University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill. He is also the former Editor-in-Chief of the Journal of Productivity Analysis. Lynda Khalaf is a Professor of Economics at Carleton University. Her research fields include econometrics, energy econometrics, and financial econometrics.
Michael Veall is a Professor of Economics at McMaster University. He received his Ph.D in Economics at M.I.T. His fields of research include Applied Econometrics, Public Economics, Population Economics, and Health Economics.
Marcel-Cristian Voia is an Associate Professor and Co-Director of the Centre for Monetary and Financial Economics at Carleton University. He received his Ph.D. in Economics at the University of Western Ontario. His research fields include micro-econometrics, applied econometrics, industrial organization, and labour economics.