Abstract:
The study attempts to empirically establish whether rent seeking diverts industries to
non-maximizing direction resulting in lower efficiency scores and hence impaired
performance of the economy as a whole. Technical and allocative efficiency scores of six
manufacturing industries have been calculated using stochastic frontier analysis and data
envelopment analysis on a pooled data for the year 1982 to 2005. Subjective evidence from
previous studies about collusive rent seeking practices has been incorporated in the
methodology. A hypothesis has been tested whether rent seeking causes inefficiency. The
results show that industries with subjective evidence of collusive rent seeking empirically
prove to be rent seekers with lower technical and allocative efficiency scores compared to
fair industries.
Hypothetical results prove that Sugar, Cement, and Automobile Manufacturing industries
are involved in collusive rent seeking due to which their efficiency scores are significantly
lower than fair industries which include Paints, Beverages and Fertilizer industries.
In industries affected by rent seeking, profit-maximization approach is replaced by
rent-maximization where the entrepreneurs lose interest in increasing productivity and
resources are wasted to form collusive bodies to control market factors and have supportive
regulations. To offset this affect, protection as well as privatization policies may be
formulized carefully and regulatory bodies may be re-structured and neutralized to ensure
that rent seeking monopolistic cartels are not formed and as a result a competitive
environment is developed.
The study recommends that industries may be supplied with cheaper and abundant energy
sources for higher efficiency. Labor-intensive production policies may be implemented as
the country is abundant in labor supply. Industrial policies by Federal Government should
be based on the recommendations of Planning Commission of Pakistan and these policies
should be implemented to full extent. Lastly, the public-sector manufacturing and service
enterprises should be re-engineered to develop a competitive industrial environment
between public and private sectors as this competitive industrial environment would
outsmart non-maximizing rent seekers.