2023
DOI: 10.1007/s11123-023-00660-9
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Proper modelling of industrial production systems with unintended outputs: a different perspective

Abstract: The question of how to properly model production systems with unintended outputs has proven both controversial and of particular interest to the productivity and efficiency community. The paper explains why some of the arguments put forward in these controversies are hardly convincing for industrial and other processes. Among other things, there is a lack of clear conceptual labelling of the different types of joint production, especially coupled production, which is the main source of undesirable and other un… Show more

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Cited by 3 publications
(2 citation statements)
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“…Assuming free disposability of an intermediate product implies that its overproduction is of no value for the system as a whole whereas other quantities of the same intermediate product are assigned positive values if they are maximised as process output of a production stage or minimised as process input of the subsequent stage in order to calculate efficiency scores of both stages (units, divisions). Thus, depending on its (produced or consumed) quantity, one and the same type of object may change its value from positive (good) to zero (neutral or free)or even negative (bad) if its disposal is costly (Dyckhoff, 2023). Such facts are widely ignored in the common literature on productivity and efficiency, and thus form an important research gap.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…Assuming free disposability of an intermediate product implies that its overproduction is of no value for the system as a whole whereas other quantities of the same intermediate product are assigned positive values if they are maximised as process output of a production stage or minimised as process input of the subsequent stage in order to calculate efficiency scores of both stages (units, divisions). Thus, depending on its (produced or consumed) quantity, one and the same type of object may change its value from positive (good) to zero (neutral or free)or even negative (bad) if its disposal is costly (Dyckhoff, 2023). Such facts are widely ignored in the common literature on productivity and efficiency, and thus form an important research gap.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…their desirability is not fixed but depends on their produced or consumed quantity (cf. Dyckhoff (2023) in this regard).…”
Section: Disposability Of Intermediate Productsmentioning
confidence: 90%