"Productivity" (1)
Productivity, Economic
Productivity in economics is the ratio of what is produced to what is
required to produce it. Usually this ratio is in the form of an average,
expressing the total output of some category of goods divided by the total
input of, say, labor or raw materials. In principle, any input can be used
in the denominator of the productivity ratio. Thus, one can speak of the
productivity of land, labor, capital, or subcategories of any of these
factors of production. One may also speak of the productivity of a certain
type of fuel or raw material or may combine inputs to determine the
productivity of labor and capital together or of all factors combined.
Labor is by far the commonest of the factors used in measuring
productivity. One reason for this is, of course, the relatively large
share of labor costs in the value of most products. A second reason is
that labor inputs are measured more easily than certain others, such as
capital. This is especially true if by measurement one means simply
counting heads and neglecting differences among workers in levels of skill
and intensity of work. In addition, statistics of employment and man-hours
are often readily available, while information on other productive factors
may be difficult to obtain. Not least important in explaining the emphasis
on labor as an input is the fact that, historically, technological advance
has made itself felt through the displacement of labor-that is, through
increases in labor productivity-rather than through the displacement of
other factors. Some kinds of labor productivity measures are thus valuable
as indicators of this process and of the resulting improvements in man's
material well-being.
The productivity of land, though it receives considerably less
attention than the productivity of labor, has been o historical interest.
In ancient and preindustrial times the products of the soil comprised the
bulk of total output and land productivity thus constituted the major
ingredient in a people's standard of living. Soil of low productivity
could, and over much of the Earth still does, mean poverty for a region's
inhabitants. It is, however, no longer generally believed, as it was in
past centuries, that a country's economic well-being is inevitably tied to
the productive powers of the land, and the productive potential of the
land itself has proved to be not fixed but greatly expandable through the
use of modern agricultural methods. Moreover, industrialization, where it
has taken place, has greatly reduced man's dependence on agriculture.
These circumstances, together with expanding opportunities for trade, have
enabled some countries to overcome in substantial degree the handicaps of
a meagre agricultural endowment.
The productivity of capital-plant, equipment, tools, and other physical
aids-is a subject of long-standing interest to economists, though concern
with its empirical aspects is of more recent origin. Improved statistical
reporting and the availability of data in a few industrially advanced
countries, notably since World War 11, have encouraged systematic efforts
to measure the productivity of this factor. Compared with achievements in
measuring labor productivity, however, the progress realized has been
quite limited. There are considerable theoretical and practical
difficulties to be overcome.
(1) The New Encyclopedia Britannica- 15th edition - Macropedai Volume
15 Creating Value Where It Counts - Peter G.W. Keen - page 27-28
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