Econintersect LLC | Jun 28, 2015 06:21AM ET
In the last few quarters, the USA has seen a fairly significant decline in headline productivity growth. Some have suggested there is a correlation to GDP - and of course there is as headline productivity is measured by economists using monetary means - and this methodology would correlate to GDP growth. This is not the way an industrial engineer measures productivity.
The reason productivity is measured is to understand if the effort required to produce products or services is improving or declining. In the private sector , these metrics are used to monitor our continuous improvement changes which in turn effect profitability. Productivity improvements should improve profitability and/or allow the product to be sold at a lower price point.
Here is the productivity chart for non-farm business - and my interpretation of the trend lines in green.
Headline productivity does not properly measure what is going on under the hood of the economy. Consider the following examples:
Consider that in the:
1990s, productivity jumped because trade agreements allowed production to be moved offshore. In this period the worst productive segments of production were outsourced - while remaining segments streamlined and automated. After all, this was the period of the explosion of the internet.
2000s until the Great Recession , productivity declined as the rate of offshoring lessened - and productivity returned to historic mean levels.
Aftermath of the Great Recession, the effects of automation and other pricing components allowed return of exported product production. There was no productivity gain when you start producing again - and if your facility is full of non-humans - it is harder to improve HUMAN labor productivity.
In the 1990s, the headline productivity gains manifested as profits. This made GDP grow. Fast forward to today where real productivity gains are being used to lower product prices because of competition and the current deflationary environment. This is not good for GDP - and because headline productivity is calculated similarly to GDP using monetary inputs - both GDP and headline productivity are seen to decline.
Some people believe business is not investing in the USA - but currently the trend is up - and investment is currently nearly in the range seen in the 2000s. Some of this investment will be used to buy robotics and automations.
It all boils down to HOW productivity improvements are used. In 2015 - real productivity growth is being used to lower costs so that products can be sold at a more competitive price. This is not good for GDP even though in the long term view it may be beneficial to the economy.
The Econintersect Economic Index for data sets which are dancing closer and closer to zero growth. Please note that most 6 month outlook forecasts are for a marginally improving economy.
The ECRI WLI growth index is now in positive territory but still indicates the economy will have little growth 6 months from today.
The market was expecting the weekly initial unemployment claims at 270,000 to 275,000 (consensus 273,000) vs the 271,000 reported. The more important (because of the volatility in the weekly reported claims and seasonality errors in adjusting the data) 4 week moving average moved from 277,000 (reported last week as 276,750) to 273,750. The rolling averages generally have been equal to or under 300,000 since August 2014.
Bankruptcies this Week: Midway Gold, Molycorp, Local
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