Chap15

Subdecks (1)

Cards (156)

  • Productivity
    Rate at which goods are produced, and the amount produced in relation to the work, time and money needed to produce them
  • Businesses can produce more output if productivity can be raised – more output with same or less input (resources)
  • Productivity
    A measure of the efficiency of factors of production
  • Productivity
    Measured by output per unit of input employed or by output per hours worked
  • 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.
  • Factors affecting productivity - LAND
    • Fertilisers and pesticides
    • Drainage
    • Irrigation
    • Reclamation
    • Genetically modified crops
  • Factors affecting productivity - LABOUR
    • Training
    • Motivation
    • Working practices
    • Migration
  • Factors affecting productivity - CAPITAL
    • Introduction of new technology and advancements
  • Division of labour
    Production is broken down into many separate tasks with each worker allocated to a specific task
  • Division of labour
    • Can raise output per person (labour productivity) as people become more efficient through constant repetition of a task
    • Higher output per person helps to lower supply cost per unit (same salary but higher output -> profits)
    • Reduced supply costs in theory lead to lower prices for consumers -> increase of economic welfare
  • Division of labour - ADVANTAGES for WORKER
    • Focus on same task – more skilled and better at their job
    • The more highly skilled, the more likely to get paid better
    • If highly skilled in a specialist task - higher job satisfaction
  • Division of labour - DISADVANTAGES for WORKER
    • Work gets boring as repetitive especially if little skill needed
    • Job dissatisfaction and decreased motivation
    • Health problems (joint wear) - same position
    • Too specialised – risk of unemployment since more difficult to fit to other different types of work
  • Division of labour - ADVANTAGES for BUSINESS
    • 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
    • Profitability increases
  • Division of labour - DISADVANTAGES for BUSINESS
    • 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