News and Document archive source
copyrighted material disclaimer at bottom of page

NewsMineeconomyunited-states2007-jan-may — Viewing Item


US productivity growth behind EU for first time { December 2007 }

Original Source Link: (May no longer be active)
   http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/16758679/

http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/16758679/

US productivity growth lowest for a decade

By Chris Giles in London
Updated: 1:42 a.m. ET Jan 23, 2007

The US economy last year recorded its lowest rate of labour productivity growth in more than a decade, with growth in output per hour worked falling behind the EU and Japan. The fall casts further doubt on the ability of the Federal Reserve to cut interest rates as the US economy slows.

Research to be published on Tuesday by the Conference Board, the international business organisation, shows that US labour productivity in the whole economy grew by 1.4 per cent in 2006 as slower economic growth was combined with a rapid rise in employment.

Gail Fosler, the chief economist of the Conference Board, told the Financial Times that the fall in productivity growth was unlikely to be cyclical and the result of weaker gains in services' industries, raising "concerns about the long-lasting productivity impact of information and communications technology".

If weak productivity growth continues, she said, "even in a slow growth environment, the US economy will be performing close to its potential", restricting the Fed's ability to cut interest rates.

Better economic figures released this year, alongside emerging signs of a slowdown in US economic potential, has led to tumbling market expectations of a rate cut in recent weeks. Investors now believe that there is only about a 10 per cent chance of a reduction in official interest rates by the May meeting of the Fed's interest rate-setting committee, according to the Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland.

The US slowdown in whole economy productivity growth over the past three years - to a rate half that in 2002 and 2003 - contrasts with rising productivity growth in Japan, on the back of a surge in manufacturing exports on the Conference Board's internationally comparable figures.

Japan's labour productivity grew by 2.5 per cent in 2006 as manufacturing companies took advantage of new demand from China in addition to its traditional export destinations.

Europe improved its productivity performance considerably last year as it enjoyed its first year of strong economic growth since 2000. However, the improvement in Nordic countries and Germany masked continued weakness in southern Europe, where growth was generated by surging employment rather than an improvement in the efficiency of the economies of Spain, Italy and Portugal.

The Conference Board recorded that productivity growth remained extremely high in emerging countries of China, India and Eastern Europe, as inefficient companies fell away and huge numbers of workers moved from relatively inefficient sectors such as agriculture to manufacturing.

China recorded 9.5 per cent productivity growth in 2006, while India achieved 6.9 per cent and the 12 new EU member states achieved 4.1 per cent growth.

Copyright The Financial Times Ltd. All rights reserved.



Almost 7m kids die a year from hunger
Anxiety over housing market pulls down stocks { March 28 2007 }
Credit counselors overwhelmed by mortgage crisis
Dollar drops under half british pound { March 2007 }
Dollar may fall on weak manufacturing { December 2007 }
Dollar nears record low against euro { March 2007 }
Dow fell over 500 points { January 2007 }
Dow hits 12800 record high { March 2007 }
Existing home sales fall 8 percent { March 2007 }
Factory orders plunge { March 6 2007 }
Gold selloff continues to cover equity losses { February 2007 }
Greenspan warns of US recession { January 2007 }
Hershey cuts jobs builds plant in mexico { January 2007 }
Home prices to fall for first time since great depression { April 12 2007 }
Investers sell gold to recover market losses { January 2007 }
January 2007 new homes sales fall 17 percent
Jobless numbers highest in weeks { December 2007 }
Late mortgage payments up forclosures surge { March 14 2007 }
Retail sales fell sharply last month { May 11 2007 }
Soaring rates risks 2m american homes { March 14 2007 }
Stocks plummet on subprime concerns
Trade deficit with china reaches record 214b { January 10 2007 }
US food prices spiked { March 2007 }
US productivity growth behind EU for first time { December 2007 }
Wallstreet plummets after chinese stocks drop { January 2007 }

Files Listed: 25



Correction/submissions

CIA FOIA Archive

National Security
Archives
Support one-state solution for Israel and Palestine Tea Party bumper stickers JFK for Dummies, The Assassination made simple