The Malta Business Weekly

Productivi­ty and competitiv­eness

Financial Times article, published on 9 March highlighte­d that the US has widened its productivi­ty lead over Europe

- SILVAN MIFSUD Silvan Mifsud is director at EMCS Advisory and also a council member of The Malta Chamber

The latest data indicates that while eurozone productivi­ty fell by 1.2% in Q4 2023 from a year earlier, in the US it rose 2.6% in the same period. In conclusion, labour productivi­ty growth in the US has been more than double that of the eurozone and UK in the past two decades. Why is this? Many factors.

The US population is younger, growing more rapidly and working longer hours. All these factors are leading to greater workforce challenges in Europe than anywhere else. However, these factors only explain a part of the difference in productivi­ty. A big part of the output gap is because people in the US also produce more for each hour that they work. In essence, output per hour worked, a standard measure of labour productivi­ty has grown more than 6% in the US business sector since 2019 while in the eurozone and UK, there was a growth of around 1% over the same period.

There are also other reasons. When comparing the US to Europe, one sees that Europe has suffered a much bigger rise in energy costs due to the Russia-Ukraine war, than the US, while the fiscal policy response to all shocks from the pandemic onwards was fragmented in Europe and not so in the US. All these things add up.

Whilst Europe has various priorities on the social and environmen­tal fronts, I sincerely believe that one of its top priorities today is to have all priorities based on its top priority towards improving productive output and hence its competitiv­eness. Which is why investing heavily on the digital front in Europe, like various US based industries have done, is now essential. Hopefully, the Mario Draghi EU report on how to boost EU’s competitiv­eness will indicate the great need to boost investment­s in this direction. Besides investment­s, a change in mentality is also needed. Rather than hiring more employees to fill gaps, Europe need to automate and digitalise faster to make up for labour force scarcities.

And where does Malta stand in all this? As shown below from the Eurostat based Labour Productivi­ty per person employed statistic, our productivi­ty stood below the Euro Average level in 2012. 10 years later, Malta’s labour productivi­ty is basically still in the same position, when compared to our European counterpar­ts. Our productivi­ty level is still below the Euro area average. This is so since much of our economic growth was not being delivered by increasing productivi­ty, but by having more persons join our economy and labour market. We need to reverse this trend is we are to deliver sustainabl­e economic growth as expanding our infrastruc­ture comes at a huge costs and we cannot keep doing this indefinite­ly.

 ?? ??
 ?? ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malta