Submitted by Brickie78 t3_10q494s in explainlikeimfive
I was listening to some political pundit banging on about increasing productivity across different industries.
And something like a factory, I can see it: the more widgets you make, the more productive you are. Or how many sales you make in a call centre or on the retail floor. But how are you measuring the productivity of, say, a therapist, or a bus driver, or a teacher?
Nameless408 t1_j6nqzr6 wrote
Generally, your gut is correct: productivity is the measure of output over time. More output over the same time is higher productivity.
But industries without a hard output wouldn't be measured the same way. There isn't a concrete way to measure the productivity of teachers, though they could try to measure efficiency and extrapolate productivity from that (higher efficiency is "same output over less time" which is theoretically more productive).