US non-farm productivity jumps 6.4%

US non-farm productivity in the second quarter rose at its fastest pace in six years as companies slashed costs to protect profits…

US non-farm productivity in the second quarter rose at its fastest pace in six years as companies slashed costs to protect profits, government data showed today.

The Labor Department said non-farm productivity rose at a 6.4 per cent annual rate, the biggest gain since the third quarter of 2003, from a revised 0.3 per cent gain in the first quarter. Productivity for the January-March quarter was previously reported as a 1.6 per cent gain.

Analysts polled by Reuters had forecast productivity, which measures the hourly output per worker, rising at a 5.3 per cent rate in the second quarter.

“It's good because it helps keep inflation low; labor costs are pretty benign," said Scott Brown, chief economist at Raymond James & Associates in St. Petersburg, Florida.

READ MORE

“On the other hand it means you can do more with fewer people,” he said. US Treasury debt prices held gains on the data, while stock index futures were little moved.

Hours worked plunged at a 7.6 per cent rate in the second quarter, the Labor Department said.

Unit labor costs, a gauge of inflation and profit pressures closely watched by the Federal Reserve, fell 5.8 per cent, the biggest decline since the second quarter of 2000.

Analysts had expected unit labor costs to fall 2.4 per cent in the second quarter. Unit labor costs dropped by a revised 2.7 per cent in the January-March quarter.

The government also published revisions to productivity for 2006 through 2008 following adjustments to gross domestic product estimates.

Compensation per hour rose at a 0.2 per cent pace and, adjusted for inflation, was down 1.1 per cent, while output fell at a 1.7 per cent rate in the second quarter.

Compared with the April-June quarter of 2008, non-farm productivity was up 1.8 per cent. Unit labor costs fell 0.6 per cent year-on-year. Compensation from a year earlier rose 1.3 per cent and was up 2.2 per cent once adjusted for inflation.

Output, measured on a year-on-year basis, was down 5.6 per cent.

Reuters