Title of article
Productivity Growth and Some of Its Determinants in the Deregulated U.S. Railroad Industry
Author/Authors
John D. Bitzan and Theodore E. Keeler، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
فصلنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2003
Pages
22
From page
232
To page
253
Abstract
This study analyzes the effects of an important postderegulation innovation on rail freight productivity: the elimination of cabooses and related crew members. It also analyzes the overall growth of productivity in rail freight between 1983 and 1997 (using a translog rail cost function estimated over a sample of Class I railroads between 1983 and 1997). The results indicate that elimination of cabooses and associated crew members from freight trains reduced costs by 5-8% on the typical Class I railroad in 1997, equivalent to an annual cost saving of $2 billion to $3.3 billion for all Class I railroads. Moreover, if Class I railroads had no other technological advances since 1983, their 1997 costs (with 1997 factor prices) would have been 36-43% higher than they in fact were. Finally, the results show that overall productivity growth in rail freight did not decelerate between 1983 and 1997; if anything, it accelerated slightly.
Journal title
Southern Economic Journal
Serial Year
2003
Journal title
Southern Economic Journal
Record number
709578
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