1st Edition

Understanding Productivity

Edited By Roy Green, Phillip Toner Copyright 2027
340 Pages 32 B/W Illustrations
by Routledge

340 Pages 32 B/W Illustrations
by Routledge

A central concern of economists, policymakers and civil society in recent years has been the persistent and widespread slowdown in global productivity growth. This stands in stark contrast to the robust productivity performance and associated prosperity witnessed across advanced economies in previous decades. The productivity slowdown represents a significant concern because it underpins the... Read more

Part 1: History, Causes and Measurement

1. Productivity Growth in the History of Economic Analysis
Hagen M. Krämer and Heinz D. Kurz

2. Productivity Measurement: Main Concepts, Methods and Challenges
Christophe Andre, Annabelle Mourougane and Peter Gal

3. Multi-factor Productivity: A Critical Introduction
Dave Richardson and Phillip Toner

4. Productivity and the Demand Side of the Economy
Antonio Andreoni and Dario Guarascio

Part 2: Distribution and the Macro-economy

5. Productivity, Power, and Distribution
Jim Stanford

6. Women and the Productivity Agenda
Jill Rubery, Anthony Rafferty, and Isabelle Bi-Swinglehurst

7. Inflation and Productivity
Luciano Carment

Part 3: Productivity at the Enterprise Level

8. Productivity and the Theory of the Firm
William Lazonick

9. Home Truths about Workplace Relations and Productivity
David Peetz

10. Productivity and Management Practice: An Overview and Assessment
Renu Agarwal, Wen Helena Li, Sancheeta Pugalia and Phillip Toner

Part 4: Industry Perspectives

11. Emergent Technologies, Industrial Data and Future of Productivity
Krithika Randhawa

12. The Productivity Paradox in US Manufacturing
Ben Armstrong

13. Redefining Productivity for Service and Network-based firms
Moira Scerri and Renu Agarwal

14. Productivity Reform in the Construction and Infrastructure Industry
Martin Loosemore, Suhair Alkilani and Dave Higgon

Part 5: Productivity and Climate Change

15. Climate Change and Productivity Performance in G20 Countries
Dirk Pilat

16. Productivity and Climate Change
Martina Linnenluecke

Part 6: Future Directions for Policy

17. Directing Growth: How a Mission-oriented Industrial Strategy can Help Drive Productivity
Mariana Mazzucato

Biography

Roy Green is Emeritus Professor and Special Innovation Advisor at the University of Technology Sydney.

Phillip Toner is a Senior Research Fellow in the Department of Political Economy, University of Sydney.

“This volume provides a timely and authoritative guide to the complex debates surrounding the global productivity slowdown. Bringing together leading international experts, it explains why productivity matters for living standards and economic policy and offers readers an accessible overview of the key concepts, measurement challenges and competing interpretations shaping today’s productivity discourse and the future outlook.” Bart van Ark, Director, The Productivity Institute, University of Manchester, UK

“The persistent and puzzling global slowdown in productivity growth globally since the mid-2000s has contributed to political instability, rising inequality and geopolitical frictions. Understanding Productivity investigates the phenomenon through a mix of mainstream and institutional perspectives, covering topics ranging from innovation and financialization to the environmental crisis. The book will be of interest to policymakers and students alike, providing a guide to this engine of economic performance.” Dame Diane CoyleBennett Professor of Public Policy, University of Cambridge, UK.

“Productivity is critical to economic performance, but its meaning and measurement must evolve as our economies undergo structural change and face new challenges such as the climate transition. This volume provides a compendium of thoughtful, state-of-the-art essays.” Dani Rodrik, John F. Kennedy School of Government, Harvard University, USA.

“Understanding productivity is an essential first step to improving economic growth. This book makes a major contribution to examining the many aspects of productivity and identifying policies which may enhance productivity while addressing climate and other imperatives.” Ian GoldinDirector of the Oxford Martin Programme on Technological and Economic Change, University of Oxford, UK.

“Industrial innovation has led to productivity gains which have increased growth and raised income per head. This cycle of progress is absent in the present-day transformation in the way goods and services are produced using digital technologies, and it is important to understand why this and what can be done about it. That is why this book is so valuable as it explores the nature of productivity and the reasons for its decline, crucial matters of interest for all those concerned with economic and social progress.” Mark Dodgson, Emeritus Professor, University of Queensland, Australia.

A major enigma in economics today concerns the measurement and determinants of productivity growth. As technology becomes ever more sophisticated, paradoxically the rate of productivity growth, in especially the developed countries, exhibits a tendency to decline. The important question is why? This collection of essays by leading authorities in their respective fields, provides comprehensive assessments of the various reasons. The essays cover a wide variety of issues affecting productivity growth. They develop existing theories, but also discuss new, as well as important but neglected, insights. This book is highly recommended for anyone who wishes clear, concise and authoritative discussions of one of the most important economic questions now affecting the developed economies.
John McCombie, Professor Emeritus, University of Cambridge, UK.