Economic indicators, Featured, Labour Productivity, Productivity

Tracking productivity trends amid economic headwinds: insights from the latest OECD data

5 minute read

By Nhung Luu (nathalienhung.luu@oecd.org) and Hector Moreno (hector.moreno@oecd.org), OECD Statistics and Data Directorate1

Productivity growth is central to economic development and competitiveness. The OECD Compendium of Productivity Indicators 2025 offers a comprehensive snapshot of productivity trends, focusing on key components like capital and labour inputs. In this blog post, we unpack the key findings for 2023 and 2024 and reflect on the way ahead.

Slowdown of global growth amid tight financial conditions and geopolitical uncertainty

In 2023, the macroeconomic landscape presented challenges. Global growth slowed markedly to 1.7% in 2023 from 3% in 2022, as companies navigated a mix of tight financial conditions – including elevated interest rates and reduced access to credit – amid ongoing geopolitical uncertainties. At the same time, global trade expanded at a slower pace, reflecting broader shifts in the momentum of globalisation.

While 2024 signaled a transition towards lower interest rates in many countries, it also marked an intensification of geopolitical tensions.

How did productivity hold up in this challenging environment? The 2025 edition of the OECD Compendium of Productivity Indicators explores this question, offering insights into how productivity evolved across the world in 2023 and 2024.

Subdued overall productivity growth in 2023 and 2024

In 2023, labour productivity – measured as GDP per hour worked – for the total economy rose modestly by 0.6% on average across OECD countries. However, this average masks divergent trends, with indications of a widening gap between the euro area and the United States. Labour productivity fell by 0.9% in the euro area, the steepest drop since 2009,  extending a downward trajectory observed since 2021. By contrast, the United States recorded a 1.6% increase, matching its 2019 growth rate (Figure 1).

Figure 1. Labour productivity growth since 1995

GDP per hour worked, Per cent

Note: Official data on labour productivity data across OECD countries are only available from 2011 onwards due to the unavailability of data on hours worked for Korea prior to that year, following a methodology revision by Statistics Korea in 2017. Data of this series for years before 2011 are based on estimates using past vintage data.
Source: OECD Productivity Database (2025).

Effects of artificial intelligence remain elusive in productivity statistics

Experimental OECD estimates suggest that labour productivity growth stagnated at around 0.4% in 2024, on average, across OECD countries excluding Türkiye. This subdued performance stands in contrast to the optimism sparked by the release of generative Artificial Intelligence (AI) tools like ChatGPT and Gemini in recent years, which raised hopes for a productivity boost. The weak labour productivity growth in 2023 and 2024 suggests that sizeable benefits have yet to materialise. This is not surprising, as realising productivity gains from AI requires a combination of skilled labour, appropriate applications, and complementary investments. As such, the potential productivity gains may only become visible over time.

Weak multifactor productivity growth weighs on labour productivity performance

The modest increase in average labour productivity across the OECD in 2023 conceals significant differences across countries. Labour productivity rose in roughly half of member countries, while the other half saw declines of varying magnitude. Notably, strong productivity gains in several non-EU countries, such as Costa Rica and Korea, helped lift the OECD average (Figure 2).

Figure 2. Labour productivity growth across countries in 2023

GDP per hour worked, Total economy, Per cent

OECD Productivity Database (2025).

Key to the weak labour productivity performance was disappointing growth in multifactor productivity (MFP), which measures the overall efficiency with which an economy converts labour and capital into output. In 2023, MFP stagnated or even turned negative in most OECD countries (Figure 3). The slowdown in MFP was particularly pronounced in Luxembourg and Austria, where MFP fell by about 2%. By contrast, MFP increased significantly in the Slovak Republic (+4.6%) and Slovenia (+2%).

Figure 3. Multifactor productivity growth in 2023

Total economy, Per cent

Source: OECD Productivity Database (2025).

Labour productivity performance in 2023 was driven by within-industry developments

To better understand the drivers of economy-wide changes in productivity, labour productivity growth can be broken into three components. The first is a within-industry effect, accounting for productivity growth within each industry. The second and third come from shifts in total hours worked between industries: one referring to shifts between industries with different productivity levels (static), and the other to reallocations between industries with different productivity growth rates (dynamic).

Together, the sum of the static and dynamic components form the cross-industry reallocation effect, which played a minimal role in 2023, as shown in Figure 4 for the United States and the euro area. As has typically been the case in recent years, excluding the COVID-19 shock, within-industry effects were the main driver of changes in labour productivity. However, in about half of the countries with available data, the within-industry contribution to labour productivity was negative or close to zero, dampening overall productivity performance.

Figure 4. Contributions to labour productivity growth

Percentage points

Note: The static reallocation effect refers to the reallocations of hours worked between industries with different productivity levels. The dynamic reallocation effect accounts for the reallocations of hours worked between industries with different productivity growth rates. The sum of the two makes up the cross-industry reallocation effect. The within-industry effect reflects labour productivity developments that are not the result of reallocation of hours worked between industries. It is measured by the labour productivity growth in each industry weighted by the industry share in total value added. For United States, these three effects do not fully sum to the labour productivity growth due to the use of Fisher volume indices for GVA. However, the residual is typically small, especially when averaged over several years (see the methodological note).
Source: OECD Productivity Database (2025).

Knowledge-intensive sectors, such as information and communication, and finance, saw falling productivity in many countries in 2023. Similarly, energy-related industries, particularly electricity, gas, steam, and air conditioning supply, weighed on economy-wide productivity, notably in Greece and Croatia. In contrast, manufacturing was a key driver of productivity growth in several economies, including the Slovak Republic and Denmark.

  1. The authors would like to thank Tom Arend and Yann Dorville for their contribution to the Compendium on Productivity Indicators on which this blog relies extensively. ↩︎