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How Efficient are Brazilian Courts? Answering it with DEA Luciana Yeung* + Paulo Furquim de Azevedo* *Escola de Economia de São Paulo - Fundação Getúlio Vargas + INSPER INSTITUTE OF EDUCATION AND RESEARCH iDEAs 2009.

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  1. How Efficient are Brazilian Courts? Answering it with DEALuciana Yeung*+Paulo Furquim de Azevedo**Escola de Economia de São Paulo - Fundação Getúlio Vargas+ INSPER INSTITUTE OF EDUCATION AND RESEARCHiDEAs 2009

  2. Discussions about inefficiency in courts are not new in Brazil, but quantitative research on this topic is. • We use DEA to measure efficiency of State Courts. • Results show evidence that data collection needs improvement. • Also, efficiency varies greatly across the states. • Finally, management quality and internal organization of courts may have some still unmeasured and important impacts. Summary

  3. “Brazilian courts are in a state of crisis”. • Conservative estimates show that an average process takes 1000 to 1500 days. • Judges have, in any point in time, 10.000 cases waiting to be decided. • The Supreme Court adjudicates, every year, more than 130 thousand cases (11 Justices). • Very few empirical research has been carried out on the subject. Overview

  4. Lewin, Morey and Cook (1982) for criminal courts in the US. • Kittelsen and Førsund (1992) for district courts in Norway. • Pedraja-Chaparro and Salinas-Jiménez (1996) for High Courts in Spain. • In Brazil: Sousa and Schwengber (2005) for courts in Rio Grande do Sul (FDH and Order-M efficiency). Literature using DEA

  5. CCR (Constant Returns to Scale) • Output Oriented • Both choices are supported by the literature and, more importantly, by the structural organization of Brazilian courts. • Data from “Justiça em Números” issued by the National Council of Justice (CNJ), years 2004 to 2006, 25 out of 27 states. • Outputs: number of adjudications over workload (new cases filed in t + “leftovers” from t-1. • Inputs: number of judges, staff and computers. Our Model and Data

  6. Tables 2, 3 and 4: Efficiency Measures • National average close to 0.60, but wide variation across different states. • Table 5: Cross Year Comparison • Some clear efficient units, and some clear inefficient units. • Many “inconsistent” results, especially for year 2005. • Efficiency performance not related to economic wealth of the state. Results and Analysis

  7. Correlation = -0.005

  8. DEA shows that the traditional justification for court inefficiency, namely lack of resources, is not supported. • Instead, management of internal organization seems to matter (recent project by National Council of Justice). • Preliminary index of “quality of internal organization” to capture aspects of management. • The result: 77.8% (“optimistic” view) or 56% (“cautious” view) of correlation between the index and DEA-efficiency. A Potential New Explanation

  9. End of PresentationThank you! Luciana Yeung (luciana.luktai.yeung@gmail.com) Paulo Furquim de Azevedo

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