US Productivity Is on the Upswing Again. Will AI Supercharge It?

Remember the productivity mini-freakout of 2022 and early 2023? Real output per hour in the nonfarm business sector, the most watched measure of labor productivity, had posted five consecutive quarters of year-over-year declines, the first time that had ever happened (“ever” in this case going back to the late 1940s, when the US Bureau of Labor Statistics data series begins). “Americans are becoming less productive, and that’s a risk to the economy,” was one headline. “American worker productivity is declining at the fastest rate in 75 years — and it could see CEOs go to war against WFH,” was another.

That freakout is over. Three consecutive quarters of strong growth have put productivity either back on trend or well above it, depending on which recent trend line you’re following. Productivity’s sharp rise and fall from 2020 to 2022 was apparently just another one of those weird pandemic phenomena, now disappearing in the rearview mirror.

Labor Productivity Is Back on Track

The short- to medium-term significance of the recent productivity recovery is that rising productivity reduces inflationary pressures, thus making a soft-landing scenario likelier in which inflation is tamed without a recession.

The long-term significance of productivity growth is that it allows living standards to rise. Since the early 1970s, productivity growth has been anemic in the US other than a decadelong spurt starting in the mid-1990s. Even with the revival over the past year, growth still appears low by pre-1970 standards (the chart below shows five-year annualized growth because the one-year rate is noisy and the three-year one is riding the pandemic roller coaster shown in the first chart).

Three Quarters of a Century of Productivity Growth