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Total Factor Productivity Reference: Dynamic Manufacturing.

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Presentation on theme: "Total Factor Productivity Reference: Dynamic Manufacturing."— Presentation transcript:

1 Total Factor Productivity Reference: Dynamic Manufacturing

2 TFP Starting Point Factor Productivity –The amount of output relative to amount of a specific input (e.g. units per labor hour) –Example: last year - 10 units of output per labor hour this year – 12 units of output per labor hour labor productivity increased by 20% (from 10 to 12) Total Factor Productivity (TFP) –A combined measurement of the amount of output (of a product) relative to the sum of all resource inputs (the factors) –A means of measuring the overall performance of an operation

3 Total Factor Productivity Productivity Price Volume Profit IncreaseBase Profit New Profit

4 Productivity Measurement Issues How to combine inputs that are measured in different units? …Labor hours …Material weights …Energy BTUs How to treat output ‘units’ that change over time …Standard product & options …Quality improvements …New products, line mix

5 TFP Basic Approach Monetarize all variables …assumes quality differentials are reflected in prices & costs Adjust for inflation Use $$$ as a surrogate (Implicit measure) Note: Requires units & price data for all inputs and outputs … or calculable approximations

6 TFP Simplified Analytical Process Restate base period (P1) results @ current period (P2) prices Calculate real volume growth: P2 sales (output) divided by P1 sales @ P2 prices Calculate increase (decrease) in the nominal levels of all inputs in P2 relative to their respective levels in P1 (stated @ P2 prices) … sum the ‘total factors’ Compare % increases in factor levels to the % real volume growth … differences are approximately the factor and total factor productivity …e.g. if real volume growth is 15% and price adjusted factor levels increase 10%, period-to-period productivity is approximately 5% Alternate method …

7 TFP Alternate Method Compute total sales dollars per factor in the base period (P1) … i.e. divide sales dollars by the dollar cost of each individual factor and total of all factors …e.g. $7 of sales per each dollar of labor Restate current period (P2) sales and factor costs; ‘deflate’ by the specific price increases …e.g. If nominal P2 sales are $110,000 and prices increase by 10% from P1 to P2, then the restated P2 value is $100,000 ($110,000 / 1.10) Compute total sales dollars per factor in the current period (P2) on a restated (deflated) basis … i.e. divide deflated sales dollars by the deflated dollar cost of each individual factor Compare increases / decreases in sales per factor dollar from P1 to deflated P2 … % changes are approximately the factor and total factor productivity


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