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Economic
History
Manufacturing
productivity
There is general agreement that the industrialized countries' labour
productivity levels have converged since the last quarter of the
nineteenth century, but this is largely based on trends in comparative
GDP per worker for the whole economy, which many economic historians
simply assume apply also to the manufacturing sector. In Discussion
Paper No. 708, Research Fellow Stephen Broadberry finds that
trends in comparative labour productivity in manufacturing since 1870
differed markedly from those for the whole economy. The US did not
overtake the UK around 1890, since labour productivity in US
manufacturing was already roughly double the UK level in 1870. The US
lead remains close to this 2:1 level today, despite substantial swings
in comparative overall labour productivity, particularly across the two
World Wars.
The GDP data suggest that German labour productivity was less than half
of the UK level in 1870 and did not catch up until the 1970s, but German
labour productivity in manufacturing was already close to the UK level
in the late nineteenth century and pulled substantially ahead after
World War II. These results suggest that the overall convergence of
labour productivity occurred not through the convergence in
manufacturing but rather through trends in other sectors and the
compositional effects of structural change. In particular, the expansion
of high-productivity manufacturing, the settling of the prairies and
improvements in transport accounted for much of the US rise to overall
productivity leadership, while the reduction of employment in
low-productivity agriculture contributed to Germany's catch-up.
Differences in capital per worker cannot explain the persistent large
labour productivity gap between the US and Europe, which also reflects
technological choice. The emergence of a US system of production based
on substituting cheap resources and machinery for skilled labour led to
a large initial US productivity lead in certain sectors, while European
firms continued to compete effectively in others on the basis of skilled
labour. As mass production techniques were applied in more sectors, such
productivity gaps became uniform.
Manufacturing and the Convergence Hypothesis: What the Long Run Data
Show
Stephen N Broadberry
Discussion Paper No. 708, July 1992 (HR)
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