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15 States With the Greatest Labor Productivity

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    Editor’s Note: This story originally appeared on https://smartestdollar.com/research/states-with-greatest-labor-productivity-2022″>Smartest Dollar.

    With numerous economic experts predicting that the U.S. is headed toward recession, one of the many concerning signals is a sharp decline in https://www.bls.gov/opub/btn/volume-3/what-can-labor-productivity-tell-us-about-the-us-economy.htm”>labor productivity.

    After more than a decade of https://www.bls.gov/opub/mlr/2021/article/the-us-productivity-slowdown-the-economy-wide-and-industry-level-analysis.htm”>below-average productivity growth, the COVID-19 pandemic raised the prospect of a https://www.washingtonpost.com/business/2021/08/18/us-productivity-boom/”>productivity boom. Many low-productivity jobs were eliminated early in the pandemic, while major infrastructure investments and the accelerated adoption of automation and artificial intelligence created conditions for productivity to rise.

    But more recent data has shown productivity declining. The Bureau of Labor Statistics reported a https://www.bls.gov/news.release/prod2.nr0.htm”>7.5% decline in labor productivity during the first quarter of 2022, the steepest decline since 1947.

    Productivity is a useful metric for assessing the economy because it reflects the economy’s ability to generate goods and services from the same amount of work. Productivity growth can simultaneously benefit businesses through increased profits, consumers through increased availability of goods and services, and workers through increased compensation.

    In recent decades, however, the link between productivity growth and wage growth has weakened. Experts term this phenomenon the “https://www.epi.org/productivity-pay-gap/”>productivity-pay gap.” Beginning in the late 1970s, the growth rate for compensation began to level out, even as labor productivity continued to increase.

    To determine the states with the greatest labor productivity, researchers at Smartest Dollar divided each state’s total value-added output by its total annual hours worked. The data used in this analysis is from the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics https://www.bls.gov/bls/productivity.htm”>Office of Productivity and Technology. Read more about our methodology at the end.

    Here are the states with the greatest labor productivity.

    15. Pennsylvania

    Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania
    Sean Pavone / Shutterstock.com
    • Labor productivity: $79.26
    • Total value-added output: $702,670,372,000
    • Total employment: 5,392,400
    • Average annual hours per worker: 1,644

    14. Texas

    Corpus Christi Texas
    Sean Pavone / Shutterstock.com
    • Labor productivity: $80.54
    • Total value-added output: $1,640,004,984,000
    • Total employment: 11,749,000
    • Average annual hours per worker: 1,733

    13. Wyoming

    Jackson Hole, Wyoming
    f11photo / Shutterstock.com
    • Labor productivity: $80.62
    • Total value-added output: $31,586,315,000
    • Total employment: 233,400
    • Average annual hours per worker: 1,679

    12. North Dakota

    Fargo, North Dakota
    Jacob Boomsma / Shutterstock.com
    • Labor productivity: $82.06
    • Total value-added output: $48,299,490,000
    • Total employment: 353,500
    • Average annual hours per worker: 1,665

    11. Colorado

    Colorado Power Plant
    Ann Cantelow / Shutterstock.com
    • Labor productivity: $82.26
    • Total value-added output: $334,379,906,000
    • Total employment: 2,540,100
    • Average annual hours per worker: 1,600

    10. Maryland

    Baltimore, Maryland
    ESB Professional / Shutterstock.com
    • Labor productivity: $82.34
    • Total value-added output: $310,204,445,000
    • Total employment: 2,313,200
    • Average annual hours per worker: 1,629

    9. Illinois

    Joliet Illinois
    Henryk Sadura / Shutterstock.com
    • Labor productivity: $88.42
    • Total value-added output: $778,025,075,000
    • Total employment: 5,326,200
    • Average annual hours per worker: 1,652

    8. Alaska

    Anchorage, Alaska
    Rex Lisman / Shutterstock.com
    • Labor productivity: $90.44
    • Total value-added output: $39,763,770,000
    • Total employment: 262,600
    • Average annual hours per worker: 1,674

    7. New Jersey

    Trenton, New Jersey
    FotosForTheFuture / Shutterstock.com
    • Labor productivity: $91.21
    • Total value-added output: $548,008,610,000
    • Total employment: 3,655,500
    • Average annual hours per worker: 1,644

    6. Connecticut

    house in Hartford Connecticut
    Jon Bilous / Shutterstock.com
    • Labor productivity: $98.65
    • Total value-added output: $247,743,547,000
    • Total employment: 1,538,800
    • Average annual hours per worker: 1,632

    5. Massachusetts

    Worcester, Massachusetts
    Sean Pavone / Shutterstock.com
    • Labor productivity: $100.72
    • Total value-added output: $533,657,907,000
    • Total employment: 3,288,900
    • Average annual hours per worker: 1,611

    4. California

    Modesto, California
    Matt Gush / Shutterstock.com
    • Labor productivity: $103.30
    • Total value-added output: $2,729,409,518,000
    • Total employment: 15,875,600
    • Average annual hours per worker: 1,664

    3. Delaware

    Wilmington, Delaware
    Paul Brady Photography / Shutterstock.com
    • Labor productivity: $104.53
    • Total value-added output: $66,888,567,000
    • Total employment: 404,900
    • Average annual hours per worker: 1,580

    2. Washington

    Bremerton, Washington
    Ceri Breeze / Shutterstock.com
    • Labor productivity: $106.09
    • Total value-added output: $536,309,572,000
    • Total employment: 3,071,500
    • Average annual hours per worker: 1,646

    1. New York

    Buffalo New York
    Sopotnicki / Shutterstock.com
    • Labor productivity: $117.86
    • Total value-added output: $1,530,281,417,000
    • Total employment: 8,106,800
    • Average annual hours per worker: 1,602

    Methodology

    Man analyzing data on a laptop
    fizkes / Shutterstock.com

    The data used in this analysis is from the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics https://www.bls.gov/bls/productivity.htm”>Office of Productivity and Technology (OPT). To determine the states with the greatest labor productivity, researchers divided each state’s total value-added output by its total annual hours worked. In the event of a tie, the state with the greater value-added output was ranked above.

    All data shown is for private, nonfarm industries in 2021. Value-added output is defined as gross output minus intermediate inputs (such as energy, material, and services). A complete set of definitions can be found at the https://www.bls.gov/productivity/glossary.htm”>BLS glossary page.

    Disclosure: The information you read here is always objective. However, we sometimes receive compensation when you click links within our stories.


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