Information about Work Productivity
Labour productivity USA, Japan, FRG
Labour productivity is defined by the OECD to be "the ratio of a volume measure of output to a volume measure of input" OECD Manual: “Measuring Productivity; Measurement of Aggregate and Industry-Level Productivity Growth.” (2002) Volume measures of output are normally GDP or GVA (Gross Value Added), expressed at constant prices i.e. adjusted for inflation. The three most commonly used measures of input are: hours worked; workforce jobs; and number of people in employment. Measured labour productivity will vary as a function of both other input factors and the efficiency with which the factors of production are used (total factor productivity). So two firms or countries may have equal total factor productivity (productive technologies) but because one has more capital to use, labour productivity will be higher.
Output per worker corresponds to the "average product of labour" and can be contrasted with the marginal product of labour, which refers to the increase in output that results from a corresponding (marginal) increase in labour input.
Measurement Issues
Labour productivity can be measured in physical terms or in price terms.Whilst the output produced is generally measurable in the private sector, it may be difficult to measure in the public sector or in NGOs. The input may be more difficult to measure in an unbiased way as soon as we move away from the idea of homogeneous labour ("per worker" or "per worker-hour"):
- the intensity of labour-effort, and the quality of labour effort generally.
- the creative activity involved in producing technical innovations.
- the relative efficiency gains resulting from different systems of management, organisation, co-ordination or engineering.
- the productive effects of some forms of labour on other forms of labour.
In macroeconomic terms, controlling for hours worked (i.e. expressing labour productivity as per worker-hour) should result in readily comparable productivity statistics, but this is often not done since the reliability of data on working hours is often poor. For example, the US and UK have much longer working hours than Continental Europe - this will inflate the figures on productivity in these countries if it is not accounted for. When comparing labour productivity statistics across countries, the problem of exchange rates must be considered because differences in how output is accounted for in different countries will change labour productivity statistics, quite apart from the obvious issues surrounding converting different currency units to a standard base.
Sources
OECD Manual: “Measuring Productivity; Measurement of Aggregate and Industry-Level Productivity Growth.” (2002)External links
gross domestic product, or GDP, is one of the ways for measuring the size of its economy. The GDP of a country is defined as the total market value of all final goods and services produced within a country in a given period of time (usually a calendar year).
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- GVA is an abbreviation for Gross Value Added.
- GVA is the IATA code for Geneva Cointrin International Airport.
- GVA is the stock symbol for Granite Construction Inc.
- GVA is an abbreviation for the Gloucestershire Volunteer Artillery.
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In economics, the marginal product or marginal physical product is the extra output produced by one more unit of an input (for instance, the difference in output when a firm's labour is increased from five to six units).
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