4.6 Article

Public support for performing arts. Efficiency and productivity gains in eleven European countries

Journal

SOCIO-ECONOMIC PLANNING SCIENCES
Volume 85, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE INC
DOI: 10.1016/j.seps.2022.101444

Keywords

Cultural public expenditure; SFA production Function; Performing arts; Technical efficiency; TFP change

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This paper investigates the importance of public cultural expenditure for the efficiency and productivity of the performing arts (PA) firms. The empirical results show that PA firms are technically inefficient and could increase their artistic output between 32 and 42% through improving efficiency. The study also finds that public spending on culture increases the efficiency of PA firms, contrary to the common belief.
This paper investigates the importance of public cultural expenditure for the efficiency and productivity of the performing arts (PA) firms. To this aim, we estimate a translog production function using the stochastic frontier approach (SFA), and we obtain the estimates of both technical efficiency and its determinants for the PA firms in EU-11 countries over the period 2009-2017. The large panel data set enables the application of robust true random-effects SFA techniques, which control for noise, unobserved firms' heterogeneity and endogeneity of the inputs. Moreover, by estimating a production function, the characteristics of the production technology in the PA sector is also derived. The empirical results demonstrate that PA firms are technically inefficient, implying that the investigated firms could increase their artistic output between 32 and 42% and that decreasing returns to scale are prevalent, due to the presence of too many micro and large-scale firms in the European PA sector. In contrast to the seminal Baumol and Bowen's [5] paper, we also demonstrate that the total factor productivity (TFP) increased in the EU PA firms over the examined period. Technical efficiency, although relatively low, was the main driver of this productivity growth, as opposed to scale efficiency change or technological change, which display very small or no increases. We also find that, contrary to the common wisdom on its negative effects on firm efficiency, public spending on culture increases the efficiency of PA firms. Within this context some policy implications are discussed.

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