July 10, 2009 (The Editor’s Desk is updated each business day.)

Changes in nonfarm business productivity, 1947-2008

Though productivity growth in the nonfarm business sector has trended upwards over the last 60 years, a slowdown in productivity growth in nonfarm businesses took place from the early 1970s through 1995.

Average annual rate of change of productivity growth in the nonfarm business sector, 1947-2008
[Chart data—TXT]

After 1995 productivity growth shifted upwards, until recently. This productivity boost is often attributed to capital-intensive investments and improvements in technology.

The nonfarm business sector accounts for three-fourths of output and employment in the total U.S. economy.

These data are from the BLS Productivity and Costs program.  More charts depicting measures of productivity, which describe the relationship between real output and the labor time involved in its production, may be found in "Productivity trends in business cycles: a visual essay" (HTML) (PDF) by Michael Chernousov, Susan E. Fleck, and John Glaser in the Monthly Labor Review, June 2009 issue.