Home

efficience

Efficience is a term used to describe the quality or degree to which a system, process, or action achieves a desired result, often with regard to how well means align with ends. In English, efficience is uncommon and is frequently treated as a synonym for efficiency, though some writers reserve it for a slightly different nuance.

Distinction from efficiency: Efficiency typically refers to the ratio of outputs to inputs and is closely tied

Etymology and usage: Efficience derives from Latin efficientia and entered English via French and later scholarly

Applications and measurement: In economics and operations research, efficiency is the standard concept for evaluating performance.

See also: Efficiency, Effectiveness, Productivity, Resource allocation, Performance measurement.

to
minimizing
waste
and
maximizing
productive
use
of
resources.
Efficience,
when
distinguished,
can
emphasize
the
success
or
effectiveness
of
an
action
in
attaining
its
objectives,
sometimes
with
less
focus
on
resource
costs.
In
practice,
the
terms
are
sometimes
used
interchangeably,
and
context
or
disciplinary
convention
often
determines
the
intended
meaning.
writing.
Today
it
remains
relatively
rare
in
everyday
English,
but
it
appears
in
philosophy,
economics,
and
some
European-language
translations
as
a
counterpart
or
alternative
to
efficiency.
Efficience
may
appear
in
normative
or
evaluative
discussions
that
stress
goal
attainment,
fit
to
purpose,
or
the
quality
of
outcomes.
Some
discussions
juxtapose
efficience
with
robustness,
resilience,
or
adaptability,
highlighting
trade-offs
between
achieving
aims
and
maintaining
flexibility
or
cost-effectiveness.