While
perusing the web, I stumbled on this interesting dataset for the nations that
comprise the OECD. The Organization for Economic Co-operation
and Development was established in 1961 to "promote policies that will improve the
economic and social well-being of people around the world.". It is
headquartered in Paris, France and has 34 member countries.
The
OECD provides a database of economic statistics for general use. For this
posting, I will be looking at the labour productivity dataset; while the labour
productivity data is current only to the end of 2010, it gives us some sense of
why certain nations are less prosperous than others and also tells us where our preconceived notions about labour "laziness" may be in error.
So it
is less daunting, I've created graphs from the data for three of the most
pertinent measures for this particular posting; average hours worked per
person, GDP per hour worked in United States dollars and GDP per hour worked,
using the United States as a reference point (i.e. the U.S. output per hour is
set at 100).
Here's
the first graph showing the average number of hours worked annually by OECD
nation from least to greatest:
The
OECD average is 1718 hours, the Euro area average is 1564 hours and the G7
nations' average is 1651 hours. I was rather surprised to see Chile at
the top of the list with 2068 hours worked, 20.8 percent above the OECD
average. I was just as surprised to see Greece coming in 2nd place with
2017 hours worked, well above the United States at 1695 hours, Canada at 1702
hours and Germany, the pillar of Europe, coming in at a paltry 1408 hours, a
level that is nearly 30 percent below that of Greece.
Now,
let's take a look at productivity measured using GDP created per hour worked in
United States dollars:
This
data is a bit more telling. The OECD average is 43.9 dollars of GDP per
hour worked, the Euro area average is 49.7 dollars of GDP per hour worked and
the G7 average is 51.6 dollars of GDP per hour worked. Now we see that
Greece, while working longer, creates less GDP on an hourly basis, coming in
11th last place out of 38 nations in the OECD database with an hourly average
of only 33.6 dollars per hour worked, well less than half of the OECD average.
In contrast, Germany comes in 7th place with its workers producing 53.6 dollars
of GDP per hour worked, 22 percent above the OECD average. The most
productive nations are Luxembourg and Norway; both nations are producing more
than 75 dollars of output per hour worked. I also thought that it was
interesting to note that Canada's output is well below that of the United
States at only 45.2 dollars per hour worked, nearly 25 percent below the level of
American labour which produced 59 dollars per hour worked.
Finally,
let's look at a graph that shows the GDP output per hour worked compared to the
United States:
The
OECD average is 74.5 percent of the U.S. GDP per hour and the Euro area's
average is 84.3 percent of the U.S. GDP per hour. Again, we see that
there are only three nations that are more productive than the United States as
we noted in the previous section.
It is an interesting exercise to look through the labour
productivity data for the nations in the OECD. While I had expected that
labour productivity in some nations, particularly the debtor nations of the
PIIGS fraternity, would turn out to be far lower than their less indebted
neighbours, such is not the case. This is particularly noticeable in the
case of Ireland which has among the OECD's most productive labour forces,
exceeding the output of all 38 nations in the database save three. Spain,
even with its massive unemployment issues, also fares well with its labour
output at 80.1 percent of the United States. Perhaps some of our
pre-conceived notions about labour and productivity need a bit of readjusting,
particularly in the case of Europe's debt transgressors.
Irelands GDP looks good because of Foreign Direct Investment. Strip out Google, Microsoft, Paypal etc and we are way down the list.
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ReplyDelete"Irelands GDP looks good because of Foreign Direct Investment. Strip out Google, Microsoft, Paypal etc and we are way down the list."
ReplyDeleteStrip foreign investment out of the USA, and we wouldn't look so good.
"While I had expected that labour productivity in some nations, particularly the debtor nations of the PIIGS fraternity, would turn out to be far lower than their less indebted neighbours, such is not the case. This is particularly noticeable in the case of Ireland which has among the OECD's most productive labour forces, exceeding the output of all 38 nations in the database save three. Spain, even with its massive unemployment issues, also fares well with its labour output at 80.1 percent of the United States. "
ReplyDeletePlease read Krugman on this subject.
Spain was doing quite well; Italy was doing OK, Ireland was doing well.
What happened was that the hot money rushing in caused an unsustainable real estate bubble; when it burst, the peoples of these countries were forced to pay the bankers' losses.
That, needless to say, crashed their economies.
Meanwhile, in Iceland the people made the f*cking bankers eat their own losses, and are doing much better.
It may be more telling if instead of GDP in the numerator, you took (GDP-GovenrmentSpending)/(HoursWorked). This may further disprove the preconceptions of National productivity, but it may well show that those with the largest governemnt sectors have even lower productivity.
ReplyDeleteRe Norway and Luxembourg, big energy and finance sectors respectively are flattering to their GDP/Hour.