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Labor Productivity in Eries Manufacturing Industries

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in Erie's Manufacturing Industries. Dr. James A. Kurre. The Economic Research Institute of Erie ... patents -Education. Minor: manufacturing scale. 15 ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Labor Productivity in Eries Manufacturing Industries


1
Labor Productivityin Eries Manufacturing
Industries
  • Dr. James A. Kurre
  • The Economic Research Institute of ErieSam and
    Irene Black School of Business
  • Penn State Behrend
  • For the
  • 6th Annual ERIE Conference
  • August 14, 2007

2
Thanks!
3
Labor Productivity
  • Labor Productivity
  • Value Added per hour of labor
  • Total Value Added / Total Hours Worked
  • by Production workers
  • Data come from the Census of Manufactures,
    every five years.

4
U.S. Erie Productivity Gap
5
2002 Manufacturing Productivity
  • U.S. Productivity 92.30 per hour worked
  • Erie Productivity 71.20
  • 77.1 of the U.S. average
  • 22.9 below the U.S. average
  • 249 of 359 Metro Areas

6
Metro Manufacturing Productivity
  • Calculated labor productivity
  • for 359 Metro Areas (MAs)
  • Highest 385.38 Iowa City, IA
  • Average MA 93.38
  • U.S. Average 92.30
  • Lowest 20.26 Jacksonville, NC

7
Key Question Why?
  • What causes the variation across MAs?
  • The suspects
  • -education of the workforce
  • -capital stock
  • -scale of the metro area (economies of scale)
  • -innovation (patents)
  • -IT usage

8
The Data
  • We had full data for 272 MAs for the analysis.
  • -75 of U.S. population
  • (91 of metro area population)
  • -71 of U.S. manufacturing employment
  • (90 of metro area mfg empt)

9
Variables Explored
  • Education
  • - of population with bachelors degree
  • or higher
  • Capital equipment
  • -investment per worker in 2002
  • Scale
  • -Agglomeration population
  • -Economies of scale mfg employment

10
Variables Explored, cont.
  • New Technology
  • -patents issued (1999)
  • Information Technology
  • - of total employment in three IT
  • occupational levels (high skill,
  • moderate skill, low skill)

11
Results
  • Education
  • Positive, stat sig, R2 about 6
  • Capital investment
  • Positive, consistently significant. R2 at about
    the 8-9 level
  • Scale
  • Population not stat sig
  • Mfg empt stat sig, quadratic, R2 lt2

12
Results, cont.
  • Patents
  • Positive, stat sig, R2 about 6-7
  • IT Occupations
  • Total IT stat sig, positive, R2 about 6
  • High skill stat sig, positive, R2 about 6
  • Moderate skill stat sig, positive, R2 about 4
  • Low skill not significant

13
Results, cont.
  • Best model
  • -Capital stock investment per worker
  • -High-skill IT occupations
  • Together they explain about 15 of the variation
    across metro areas in manufacturing productivity

14
Conclusions
  • To improve local productivity
  • -Capital Investment
  • -IT-- especially high-skill IT
  • -Innovation patents
  • -Education
  • Minor manufacturing scale

15
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