Stamford Advocate (Sunday)

Productivi­ty rises 7.3% as hours worked nearly halved

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U.S. productivi­ty rose at a 7.3 percent rate in the second quarter as the number of hours worked fell by nearly half, the biggest drop-off since the government started tracking the data more than 70 years ago.

The Labor Department said Friday that output decreased 38.9 percent, also the biggest decline ever recorded as hours worked fell 43 percent, with the coronaviru­s pandemic sowing economic damage

throughout the U.S.

The increase in productivi­ty was the largest since 2009. Labor costs also jumped, rising 12.2 percent.

Friday’s report is the first estimate of second-quarter productivi­ty and follows the first quarter’s 0.3 percent decline. The rise in labor costs, the largest since 2014, follows a 9.8 percent increase in the January-March quarter.

Defined as the amount of output per hour of work, productivi­ty is the key to rising living standards, and the slow pace of growth in recent years has been a major reason that wage gains have stalled. Productivi­ty mostly lagged during the record long 11-year expansion that followed the Great Recession, confoundin­g economists.

From 2000 to 2007, the year the Great Recession began, annual productivi­ty gains averaged 2.7 percent. But since then, productivi­ty has slowed to about half that pace, rising at an average annual rate of 1.4 percent from 2007 through 2019. The 2019 rate of 1.9 percent brought some optimism that productivi­ty was on the rise, but the coronaviru­s pandemic hit in the first quarter of 2020, obliterati­ng the economy and taking virtually every economic indicator down with it.

Economists have warned that the economic disruption­s caused by the coronaviru­s would likely hinder productivi­ty in coming quarters.

Last month, the government reported an astonishin­g 32.9 percent plunge in secondquar­ter gross domestic product, the value of goods the country produced in the April-June quarter. It was the sharpest such drop on records dating to 1947 and almost entirely related to the fallout from the coronaviru­s pandemic, which has shuttered business temporaril­y and permanentl­y, sending millions of workers to the unemployme­nt line.

The Trump Administra­tion has predicted a third-quarter economic rebound, but many economists think that the economy can’t fully recover until the virus is mostly defeated.

The government will issue a second productivi­ty estimate next month.

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