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PRODUCTIVITY

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The Economic System Transforms
Inputs to Outputs
Inputs Process Outputs

Land, Labor, The economic system Goods and


Capital, transforms inputs to outputs Services
Management at about an annual 2.5%
increase in productivity
(capital 38% of 2.5%), labor
(10% of 2.5%), management
(52% of 2.5%)

Feedback loop
2-2
Measures of Competitiveness
Productivity
GDP (Gross domestic product) growth
Market capitalization
Technological infrastructure
Quality of education
Efficiency of government

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What is Productivity?
Productivity is a common measure of how well
resources are being used or a measure of the effective
use of resources usually expressed as the ratio of
output to input

Output
Productivity =
Input
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Productivity measures are useful for
Tracking an operating units performance over time
Judging the performance of an entire industry or
country

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Why Productivity Matters
High productivity is linked to higher standards of
living
As an economy replaces manufacturing jobs with lower
productivity service jobs, it is more difficult to maintain high
standards of living
Higher productivity relative to the competition leads to
competitive advantage in the marketplace
Pricing and profit effects
For an industry, high relative productivity makes it
less likely it will be supplanted by foreign industry
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Typical Impacts of Productivity
Improvement

As productivity improved Costs were decreased Wages increased

Parts per man hour Cost per unit decreased Average worker's annual cash
compensation increased
$2.25
115

110 $2.00 27000


105 26000
$1.75
100 25000
95 $1.50 24000
Year A Year B Year C Year A Year B Year C Year A Year B Year C

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Measures of Productivity

Partial Output Output Output Output


measures Labor Machine Capital Energy

Multifactor Output Output


measures Labor + Machine Labor + Capital + Energy

Total Goods or Services Produced


measure All inputs used to produce them

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Examples of Partial Productivity Measures
Labor Productivity Units of output per labor hour
Units of output per shift
Value-added per labor hour

Machine Units of output per machine hour


Productivity Value-added per machine hour

Capital Units of output per dollar input


Productivity Dollar value of output per dollar input

Energy Units of output per kilowatt-hour


Productivity Dollar value of output per kilowatt-hour
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Typical Measures of Productivity in Different
Organizations
Restaurant Customers (meals) per
labor hour
Retail store Sales per square foot

Chicken farm Lbs of meat per lb. of feed

Utility plant Kilowatts per ton of coal

Paper mill Tons of paper per cord of


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wood
Example 1
7040 Units Produced
Which productivity
Sold for $1.10/unit measures can be
calculated?
Cost of labor : $1,000
What is the
Cost of materials: $520 multifactor
productivity?
Cost of overhead: $2000
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Solution 1

MFP = Output
Labor + Materials + Overhead

MFP = (7040 units)*($1.10)


$1000 + $520 + $2000

MFP = 2.20

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Example 2
5,500 Units Produced
Sold for $35/unit
500 labor hours are used
Cost of labor: $25/hr
Cost of raw material: $5,000
Cost of overhead: 2 x labor cost
What is the labor productivity?
What is the multifactor
2-13 productivity?
Solution 2: Labor Productivity

5,500 units/500 hours = 11 units/hour

Or we can arrive at a unitless figure:

(5,500 units*$35/unit)/(500 hours * $25/hr) =15.4

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Solution 2: Multifactor Productivity
MFP = Output
Labor + Materials + Overhead

MFP = (5,500 units)*($35)


(500hrs.)*$25/hr. + ($5000) + 2*(500hrs.)*$25/hr.

MFP = 4.52

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Example 3
You have just determined that your service
employees have used a total of 2400 hours of labor
this week to process 560 insurance forms. Last week
the same crew used only 2000 hours of labor to
process 480 forms.
Which productivity measure should be used?
Answer: Could be classified as a Partial Measure.
Is productivity increasing or decreasing?
Answer: Last weeks productivity = 480/2000 =
0.24, and this weeks productivity is = 560/2400 =
0.23. So, productivity2-16has decreased slightly.
U.S. Multifactor Productivity

U.S. Multifactor Productivity


(1975 - 2007)
MFP (Index, 2000 = 100)

115
110
105
100
95
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75
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07
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2-17 Year
Productivity Growth

Current productivi ty - Previous productivi ty


Productivi ty Growth = 100%
Previous productivi ty

Productivity Growth is a key factor in a contrys rate


of inflation and the standard of living of its people

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Example 4

Labor productivity on the ABC assembly line was 25


units per hour in 2006. In 2007, labor productivity was
23 units per hour. What was the productivity growth
from 2006 to 2007?

23 - 25
Productivi ty Growth = 100% 8%
25

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MFP Growth - Non-Farm
MFP Growth in the Private Non-Farm Business Sector

5
Average Annual Percent Change

3
1,9
2
1,1 1,3
1 0,4 0,6

0
1948-1973 1973-1990 1990-1995 1995-2000 2000-2007

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MFP Growth - Manufacturing

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Measurement Problems

Quality differences may distort productivity


measurements
External elements may cause an increase or
decrease in productivity
Precise units of measure may be lacking
Technological differences may lead to
misleading results.

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Productivity improves when firms:
Become more efficient
Downsize
Expand
Retrench
Achieve breakthroughs

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Factors Affecting Productivity (1 of 3)
Standardization
Technology
Use of Internet, fax machines, e-mail, computerized
billing, software
Searching for lost or misplaced items
Scrap rates
Labor turnover, layoffs, new workers
Safety
Bottlenecks 2-24
Factors Affecting Productivity (2 of 3)

Methods
Design of the workspace
Incentive plans that reward productivity
Capacity utilization
Location Methods Quality

Layout
Inventory
Technology Management
Scheduling
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Factors Affecting Productivity (3 of 3)

Shortage of IT workers and other technical


workers
Equipment breakdowns
Part and material shortages
Inadequate investment in training & education
of the employees

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Key Steps for Improving Productivity
Develop productivity measures for all operations
Determine critical (bottleneck) operations
Develop methods for productivity improvements
Establish reasonable goals
Get management support (make it clear that management
supports and encourages productivity improvements.)
Measure and publicize improvements
Invest on labor force by training and education
(Dont confuse productivity
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with efficiency)
Bottleneck Operation

10/hr
Machine #1

10/hr
Machine #2
Bottleneck 30/hr
Operation
Machine #3
10/hr

Machine #4 10/hr
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Service Productivity
Typically labor-intensive as in teaching
Frequently individually processed (doctors)
Often an intellectual task is performed by
professionals (medical diagnosis)
Often difficult to mechanize or automate
(haircut)

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Service Sector Productivity
Service sector productivity is difficult to measure
and manage because
It involves intellectual activities
It has a high degree of variability

A useful measure related to productivity is process


yield

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Productivity in the 90s

7 US
6 Germany
5 Japan

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95 96 97 98 99 00 2001

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