Multifactor productivity rose in half of manufacturing industries

RP news wires

Multifactor productivity – defined as output per unit of combined inputs – increased in about 40 percent of the 86 four-digit NAICS manufacturing industries in 2008, the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics reported on September 28. This was down from 2007, when multifactor productivity increased in about 60 percent of those industries. Fewer manufacturing industries recorded multifactor productivity increases in 2008 than in any year since 2001.  

Within the transportation sector in 2008, multifactor productivity rose 0.6 percent in air transportation and declined 1.9 percent in line-haul railroads. 

Multifactor productivity indexes relate the change in output to the change in the combined inputs of labor, capital and intermediate purchases consumed in producing that output. Multifactor productivity measures the joint influences on economic growth of a variety of factors, including technological change, returns to scale, enhancements in managerial and staff skills, changes in the organization of production and other efficiency improvements.

Manufacturing industries
Output rose in fewer manufacturing industries in 2008 than in 2007. Output rose in only 17 of 86 manufacturing industries in 2008, compared to 39 in 2007. Combined inputs fell in more industries, 65 in 2008 compared to 54 in 2007. Labor hours fell in 67 manufacturing industries in 2008, while intermediate inputs fell in 65 industries and capital services fell in 43 industries.

Among the largest manufacturing industries (those with employment over 300,000), multifactor productivity rose most in the semiconductors and electronics components industry (7.2 percent) followed by the medical equipment and supplies industry (4.5 percent). Multifactor productivity rose modestly in the largest manufacturing industry, printing and related support activities (0.4 percent). Aerospace products and parts posted the largest multifactor productivity decline (11.5 percent) in 2008 among the largest industries. 

Multifactor productivity increased in fewer manufacturing industries in 2008 than over the longer-term period from 1987 to 2008. Between 1987 and 2008, multifactor productivity increased in 45 of 86 manufacturing industries (52 percent). Output increased in 60 industries while combined inputs increased in 59 industries over the period.

Table 3 of the DOL release presents average annual multifactor productivity growth by industry for 1987 to 2008 and various sub-periods. From 2000 to 2008, multifactor productivity grew in 53 of the 86 manufacturing industries, more than in any of the other periods shown except 1990-1995.

Transportation industries
In 2008 multifactor productivity rose in air transportation, as output declined 3.1 percent and combined inputs, led by reductions in intermediate inputs, dropped 3.7 percent. Multifactor productivity in line-haul railroads fell, as output declined 1.0 percent and combined inputs increased 0.9 percent.

Productivity performance was worse in 2008 than over the 1987-2008 period for both industries. Multifactor productivity in air transportation rose at an average annual rate of 1.0 percent over the period, as output rose 3.1 percent annually and combined inputs rose 2.1 percent per year. Multifactor productivity in line-haul railroads grew 2.2 percent per year on average from 1987 to 2008, as output rose 2.2 percent per year and combined inputs showed no change.

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