Reference

Productivity

Productivity

Plain meaning

A measure of how much output is produced for a given amount of input, often labour hours.

Also called

business productivity labour productivity

Key points

  • Higher productivity can support wage growth, business investment, and stronger public finances over time.
  • Productivity is affected by capital investment, skills, technology, infrastructure, competition, and management practices.
  • It is not the same as working longer hours.
  • Central banks, Statistics Canada, and budget documents often discuss productivity as a long-term growth factor.

Why it comes up

Productivity articles help explain economic growth, tax-base growth, wage pressure, and fiscal sustainability.

News signals

productivity growth investment GDP per worker economic growth

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