"Productivity and Value" takes a critical look at the generic
concepts of productivity as they are used in most of the
conventional literature. In this compelling book, the author
challenges the concept of total-factor productivity as a valid
indicator of successes or failures in economic policy and in the
economy generally. Unique to this book is the consistent
distinction made between economic and physical expressions. The
author examines the difficulties when physical and economic
measures are mixed. Instead, he proposes that productivity, as a
measure of progress in production, should be limited to
single-factor of key commodities, such as land, labor, energy, and
capital. Such a measure, he claims, will be more realistic and will
also come closer to being understood by the public.
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