Labour productivity
Labour productivity measures output per unit of labour input, usually output units divided by labour hours worked, and is the standard non-financial efficiency measure on operating and divisional performance reports.
See it move
A packing line produces 2,400 units in 300 labour hours in week one, a productivity of 8 units per hour. In week two it produces 2,750 units in only 275 hours, lifting productivity to 10 units per hour, a 25% rise even though weekly output grew by just 350 units. Labour productivity compares physical output to hours worked, independent of wage rates.
The formula
Variables
- Labour productivity (units per hour)
- Output (units)
- Labour hours worked (hours)
Gives output generated per labour hour; used to compare operating efficiency across periods or divisions independent of wage rates.
Check yourself
A production cell produced 6,000 units last month using 400 labour hours. What was labour productivity for the month?