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Economy
Foreboding – U.S. Productivity Declined 5.2 Percent in Third Quarter, Largest Quarterly Drop in 61 Years
2021-12-11
[The Last Refuge] U.S. nonfarm productivity is a measure of economic activity within the engine of the U.S. economy. The U.S. productivity rate is a measure of how much value is produced by the economy through demand for the products and services, and the labor associated with the creation of those products and services.

Anecdotally, it has looked for quite some time that around May of this year the economy peaked, plateaued for a few weeks, and then began a slow downward progression. Today the Bureau of Labor statistics puts some revised data to that third quarter (July, August and Sept) economic activity {data here}. The quantified results align with what we sensed was taking place.

The value of all products and services generated increased by 1.8 percent. However, the labor cost of generating that small amount of added value increased by 7.4 percent. The difference between those two numbers is a drop in productivity of 5.2% over the entire quarter.

This is the largest quarterly drop in productivity since 1960 !

The Biden administration will blame the drop in productivity on a lack of material to produce the end product (ie. the COVID excuse). Which means employed people were sitting around waiting for goods to arrive and being less productive. There is a small amount of that which might be true. However, it is not the biggest factor, at least not on this scale. Keep in mind we are talking about both goods and services.

The more likely cause of such a massive decline in productivity is a genuine decline in demand. In the aggregate, consumers needed less goods and services. This likelihood aligns with the diminished and softened retail sales figures recently noted. It is a simple cause and effect. When gasoline, energy, and essential products like food cost more, consumers have less money for other stuff. Demand for the non-essential products drop.
Posted by:Flatch Wittlesbach3456

#7  Stagflation, here we come
Posted by: Merrick Ferret   2021-12-11 18:09  

#6  A global version of Heinlein's "bad luck" is right around the bend. And as Francisco D'Anconia said in Atlas Shrugged, "You asked for it, brother."
Posted by: M. Murcek   2021-12-11 13:50  

#5   If the only thing US workers are allowed to do is deliver imported goods and/or collect "benefits" that are fueled by inflation...
Posted by: Thing From Snowy Mountain   2021-12-11 13:41  

#4  US productivity declines when you ship jobs outside the borders.
Posted by: Procopius2k   2021-12-11 07:52  

#3  

This can't be so?
I heard Biden tell us on the Radio yesterday that we were in the strongest economy in 60 years.

At least that was what they put on the teleprompter for him to read.
Posted by: NN2N1   2021-12-11 06:07  

#2  How many workers are being paid to wait for imported foreign parts?
Posted by: magpie   2021-12-11 02:14  

#1  Gift wrap and a bit more can be found at this link.
Posted by: Besoeker   2021-12-11 00:55  

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