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Published online by Cambridge University Press: 01 January 2020
The UK's recent productivity performance has been strikingly weak. Output per hour worked, which increased by around 2.1 per cent per year in the decade leading up to the economic downturn, increased by just 0.2 per cent per year in the ten years following the global financial crisis. This paper presents three ‘stylised facts’ on the UK's recent productivity performance through the lens of official statistics: the weakness of recent productivity growth; the ‘gap’ in productivity terms between the UK and other leading economies; and the large differences in productivity between businesses. It surveys recent work by ONS to help researchers and policy-makers to understand the UK's productivity performance, including new experimental and official statistics, analysis and research. It concludes by drawing together the key findings of these new statistics, highlighting how further improvements might be made through the greater use of survey and administrative data.
The author recognises contributions from participants at the National Institute of Economic and Social Research (NIESR) special session at the Royal Economic Society Annual Conference 2018. Research assistance from Ted Dolby and Jamie Watt is gratefully acknowledged, as are comments on an earlier draft from Gaganan Awano, Katherine Kent, Richard Heys and an anonymous referee. Any omissions or errors are the author's.