America’s productivity engine is sputtering. Fixing it is a $10 trillion opportunity

U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics Since 2005, productivity growth has been lackluster, averaging 1.4% a year, compared to the post-World War II average of 2.2%. That is a problem. Increasing productivity–economic output per unit of input–maintains U.S. competitiveness and improves our quality of life. It is also essential to meet challenges like inflation, debt loads, entitlements, and the energy transition. Regaining historical rates of productivity growth could generate a total of $10 trillion for U.S. GDP by 2030, or $15,200 per U.S. household that year. It won’t be easy–but productivity is growing fast in some sectors and geographies. Since 2007, the information sector has grown at 5.5% annually. North Dakota’s economy has grown at nearly 3.5% and Washington’s at 2.3%. We need to improve productivity more broadly. To get the U.S. economic engine humming, we need to overcome four challenges. Workforce shortages and skills gaps There are two separate but linked workforce challenges. One is the lack of workers. U.S. workforce participation rate has fallen to 62.3% , down from 67% in the late 1990s. Only part of this is due to an aging population: More than 5 million Americans are not in the workforce but say they want […]

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