Hostname: page-component-77c89778f8-m8s7h Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-07-17T05:51:41.585Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

The Theory and Measurement of Capital Utilisation and Its Role in Modelling Investment

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  17 August 2016

Get access

Extract

Capital utilisation and the physical stock of capital are generally assumed to be close substitutes in the production process. Thus, models of the demand for capital or of investment activity must, in principle, incorporate some notion of the optimal level of capital utilisation and its associated costs. The part played by capital utilisation in investment activity is the primary reason for this paper and it is argued that the literature in this area has tended to underemphasize its role. The discussion, however, focusses on the reasons for the lack of emphasis on capital utilisation and this is traced to both problems of theory and measurement. A simple neoclassical theoretical framework is adopted throughout, although it is fairly clear that a number of further problems will be posed by the introduction of capital utilisation into a vintage model. While the theoretical discussion is perfectly general, the empirical work uses data for the U.K. Chemicals industry, simply in order to illustrate the problems of measurement.

Type
Part Four: Measurement of Capital Utilisation and Rates of Return
Copyright
Copyright © Université catholique de Louvain, Institut de recherches économiques et sociales 1984 

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Ball, R. & St Cyr, E. (1966), Employment Models in U.K. Manufacturing Industries, Review of Economic Studies, vol. 33, pp. 179207.Google Scholar
Bautista, R. (1974), The Electricity Based Measure of Capital Utilisation in Philippine Manufacturing industries, Philippine Review of Business and Economics, vol. 11, pp. 1333.Google Scholar
Betancourt, R. & Clague, C. (1981), Capital Utilisation: a Theoretical and Empirical Analysis, Cambridge University Press, Cambridge.Google Scholar
Bosworth, D. (1979), Capital Stock, Capital Services and the Use of Fuel Consumption Proxies, in Patterson, K. and Schott, K. (eds), The Measurement of Capital, Macmillan.Google Scholar
Bosworth, D. (1984), Fuel Based Measures of Capital Utilisation, Discussion Paper, Faculty of Social Sciences, Polytechnic of Central London.Google Scholar
Bosworth, D. & Dawkins, P. (1981), Work Patterns: an Economic Analysis, Gower Press.Google Scholar
Bosworth, D. & Dawkins, P. (1983), Optimal Capital Utilisation in British Manufacturing Industry, in Eichhorn, W. Henn, R. Neumann, K. & Shephard, R. (eds), Quantitative Studies in Production and Prices, Physica Verlag, Wurzburg-Wien, pp. 7386.Google Scholar
Bosworth, D. & Pugh, C. (1983), Production and Maintenance: Joint Activities of the Firm, Scandinavian Journal of Economics, vol. 85, pp. 267282.Google Scholar
Heathfield, D. (1972), The Measurement of Capital Usage Using Electricity Consumption Data, Journal of the Royal Statistical Society, Series A, vol. 135, pp. 208220.Google Scholar
Foss, M. (1963), The Utilisation of Capital Equipment, Survey of Current Business, vol. 43, pp. 816.Google Scholar
Foss, M. (1981), Long-run Changes in the Work-week of Fixed Capital, American Economic Association, Papers and Proceedings, vol. 71, pp. 5863.Google Scholar
Jorgenson, D. & Griliches, Z. (1967), The Explanation of Productivity Change, Review of Economic Studies, vol. 34, pp. 249283.Google Scholar
Moody, C. (1974), The Measurement of Capital Services by Electrical Energy, Bulletin of Economic Research, vol. 36, pp. 4552.Google Scholar
Morawetz, D. (1976), The Electricity Measure of Capital Utilisation, World Development, vol. 4, pp. 643653.Google Scholar
Nadiri, M. & Rosen, S. (1969), Inter-related Factor Demand Functions, American Economic Review, vol. 59, pp. 457471.Google Scholar
United Nation Industrial Development Organisation, Profiles of Manufacturing Establishments, vols. 1, 2 and 3, United Nations, New York, 1967, 1968 and 1971.Google Scholar
Winston, G. & Mccoy, T. (1974), Investment and the Optimal Idleness of Capital, Review of Economic Studies, vol. 127, pp. 419428.Google Scholar