Increase in Productivity arises from both increase in LABOUR PRODUCTIVITY (output per employee) and CAPITAL PRODUCTIVITY (output per unit of capital employed)
An increase in production DOES NOT automatically mean increase in productivity. It depends on how many inputs (factors of production) have been employed to supply the extra output.
Efficiency is improved through specialisation – tasks are performed more quickly and accurately – fewer mistakes and productivity (output per worker) will rise
A greater use of specialist equipment is possible when workers specialise
Production time is reduced – no time wasted from moving from one task to another
Organisation of production becomes easier as specialist workers can fit more easily into a structured system of production
Repetitive and boring job – workers dissatisfied and poorly motivated -> poor quality of work, staff arriving late at work, many absences, workers become detached and avoid work, high staff turnover -> reduction of productivity which negatively impacts profitability
Delays in production - If one stage of production depends on another (interdependence) which breaks down -> production has to stop
Loss of flexibility in the workplace if a highly skilled and specialist worker is absent and there is no one else to replace him – production may be disrupted