Here are some staggeringly obvious points about Gross Value Added, employment, and therefore productivity (the first divided by the second). But they might lead to some insight into manufacturing, demand, etc following the excellent @jeegarkakkad thread yesterday 1/9
If you have only data on GVA and employment (L), and want to explain movements in GVA/L (prod), you can quickly see which plays the bigger role. It is GVA, full stop. See these charts, for Total UK economy ... 2/
... and also for Professional Services...3/
and retail.
This is all pretty obvious. The factors of production do not tend to move as quickly as the sales. Businesses are operationally leveraged: extra sales do not produce a proportionate rise in labour, capital etc. 4/
You see this most clearly in a sector like IT. In 1998-1999, output grew 15% and 19%, and employment only 3% or so each year. Anyway, guess which sector is the exception? 5/
...yup, you guessed it. Manufacturing. To be precise, manufacturing is the sector where productivity movements are as well explained by shifts in employment as in the topline, GVA 6/
If you prefer a line chart story, this tells it. UK manufacturing had a productivity boom in the 1990s - when it was cutting staff, not growing GVA 7/
A glimmer of hope for manufacturing enthusiasts: star countries like Germany have not showed the same pattern, though I found Spain did. Though you do not have a policy set to make us Germany ...
And another one I am really fond of - AGGREGATE DEMAND MATTERS FOR PRODUCTIVITY. Certainly in the short run, but possibly over longer timescales too. As @billwells_1 likes to say, productivity is just a residual. You have GVA, and L, and it just spits out. 9/9
I realise this crucial chart is missing: the L vs GVA/L one
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Imagine an economy of restaurants, randomly trying different styles. Their outcomes range across a distribution. The winners create jobs, profits and annoying columns about their brilliant entrepreneurialism. The losers go bust. Restaurant eating rises in line with GDP 1/5
Bad policy wonks come along, and look at the top quartile. "If the median performance could match the top restaurants, the industry would be X% bigger" they opine. But of course they can't, not in terms of sales. Orders at Bob's Pizza take from orders at Sheila's Fish 2/
A lot of sectoral/regional analysis of growth hits this fallacy*. Even when someone calculates how much richer society would be if everyone had higher education. The sum of social gains *isn't* the sum of each individual's gain. What was gained at the expense of another? 3/
Bemused southern Remainers like me, about to be befuddled by the Hartlepool poll result, need constant reminders that there are lots of people who really, genuinely, honestly think that the Government did them a massive favour by pushing through Brexit ...
.... rather than, say, that a bunch of wilfully self-destructive people perversely chose to vote against their own interests to punish remote, elite others from the privileged south in an irrational spasm of cultural spite and are still somehow enjoying their vandalism
Why they still think Brexit is helping them is still beyond me, but that they do is surely undeniable
OK, long overdue, overlong thread thinking about Rachel's fundamental question here. My first reaction was to see what I have learned from the responses to my original tweet; is the answer necessarily "more business investment"? 1/18
1st obvious point: not necessarily. Biz inv can be wasted. More formally, it depends on your on marginal productivity of capital, depreciation, etc. Here a chart from a toy model where you pass quite soon the point at which more saving into capital no longer> higher wages 2/
Also very striking: we have a governance system that automatically disincentivizes learning. A consequence of centralisation
"It's a core-periphery problem, not a cities-towns-rural problem. In the core, the cities, towns and rural areas are all doing well - in the periphery, none of them".
McCann identifies a clear flaw in how we are misdiagnosing the problem
But also, there are cancelled urgent operations in the NHS. Does he think they do this for fun? 2/
Second, this bit that argues "well the lockdown won't make any difference". Again bizarre, because a. it makes an argument for a tougher lockdown, and b. clearly it does make a difference. Before, the schools were going to open. Now they are not. Contacts are reduced 3/