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Eakinomics: State of
Confusion
Productivity lies at the heart of many important economic policy issues. Over
the long term, productivity growth is central to raising the standard of
living. Productivity growth permits workers to earn higher real wages and
live better.
In the near term, productivity growth is one aspect of the kind of supply
expansion that reduces inflationary pressure. If productivity rises, firms
can pay their workers more without the pressure to pass along the cost in the
form of higher prices.
For both these reasons, strong productivity growth is unalloyed good news.
With that in mind, consider the chart (below) that shows year-over-year
growth in labor productivity – specifically the average of the previous four
quarters for each quarter since 2018. As a reflection of the then-hot labor
market, productivity growth rose steadily from roughly 1.25 percent to over 2
percent by the end of 2019. The arrival of the pandemic dented productivity
growth in the first two quarters of 2021, but faster productivity growth
ensued each quarter for the next year. Improvements in productivity growth
tailed off in the final two quarters of 2021.

A flavor of the importance of productivity growth is shown in the next chart,
which displays two scenarios for unit labor costs. The first, shown in blue,
is the path of actual unit labor costs (again, year-over-year and smoothed)
since the first quarter of 2018. Unit labor costs grew steadily faster
from the second half of 2021 into 2022. Indeed, unit labor costs jumped from
growing at roughly a 2 percent rate to growing at over a 4 percent rate and
remain in that rough range. This coincides with the rise in inflation
pressures.

Consider the second scenario, however, which shows unit labor cost growth
assuming the productivity growth is zero. Without productivity growth pushing
up the number of units, unit labor costs rise much, much faster – as much as
3 percentage points faster. These cost pressures would translate into
corresponding consumer price inflation pressures.
At this juncture, it is worth noting for the record that productivity growth
is devilishly difficult to measure. Consider Eakinomics. Measured by the
number per week (5 per week), productivity is unchanging. But perhaps one
should measure by the number of words? Or graphs? If so, productivity can
both rise and fall. Alternatively, perhaps the key is to measure the quality
of Eakinomics. That would show ever-rising productivity, right?
Putting aside these difficulties in getting productivity growth exactly
right, the Biden Administration has benefitted from solid productivity
growth, which has prevented inflation pressures from being even greater.
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