- X-
inefficiency is a
concept used in
economics to
describe instances where firms go
through internal inefficiency resulting in
higher production costs than...
- "bureaucratic inertia"
cause X-
inefficiency.
Productive inefficiency, resource-market
inefficiency, and X-
inefficiency might be
analyzed using data envelopment...
-
Energy efficiency may
refer to:
Energy efficiency (physics), the
ratio between the
useful output and
input of an
energy conversion process Electrical efficiency...
- at
which a
committee or
other decision-making body
becomes completely inefficient. In Parkinson's Law: The
Pursuit of Progress, London: John Murray, 1958...
- A
market anomaly in a
financial market is
predictability that
seems to be
inconsistent with (typically risk-based)
theories of ****et prices.
Standard theories...
-
which storage space, such as
computer memory or a hard drive, is used
inefficiently,
reducing capacity or
performance and
often both. The
exact consequences...
-
Energy conversion efficiency (η) is the
ratio between the
useful output of an
energy conversion machine and the input, in
energy terms. The input, as well...
-
efficiency also
arises in the
context of
efficiency in
production vs. x-
inefficiency: a set of
outputs of
goods is Pareto-efficient if
there is no feasible...
- point-estimation
problems for
which the minimum-variance mean-unbiased
estimator is
inefficient. Historically, finite-sample
efficiency was an
early optimality criterion...
-
bureaucratic inefficiency, waste, and corruption. In 1976, the
General ****embly
established the
Joint Inspection Unit to s**** out
inefficiencies within the...