UK faces a productivity puzzle, HR should drive the way in ensuring we tackle this problem

-

HR will drive the way in ensuring companies are more productive and HR departments should be renamed “the productivity department” this arises as recently the UK suffered its biggest productivity drop in five years.

This is what Josh Bersin, founder of the Josh Bersin Academy, which is a professional development school for HR thinks. This was discussed in HRreview’s webinar, Career pathing is your best employee retention strategy that took place on the 24th of October 2019.

This idea that HR could take on the problem of productivity is especially important as the UK currently finds itself in a productivity puzzle.

Get our essential weekday HR news and updates.

This field is for validation purposes and should be left unchanged.
Keep up with the latest in HR...
This field is hidden when viewing the form
This field is hidden when viewing the form
Optin_date
This field is hidden when viewing the form

 

According to the Office of National Statistics (ONS) on the 9th of October 2019, output per hour dropped by 0.5 per cent after four consecutive quarters of negative growth for labour productivity. This being the biggest productivity fall in the UK for five years.

Jon Boys, labour market economist at the CIPD, said:

The statistics confirm that poor productivity still haunts the UK economy. Worse still, it’s actually down on the same quarter of last year.

Businesses may have more immediate concerns than raising productivity, but it’s the only way to increase pay packets in the long term. We mustn’t be fooled by recent strong earnings growth figures, which have been driven by a tight labour market and not an increase in employers’ ability to pay.

Though we talk of a productivity puzzle, there is an obvious culprit and that’s uncertainty. Government needs to reduce uncertainty, so businesses aren’t deterred from investing for the future. We need to see more money being put into skills and people management training given our service dominated economy, where the knowledge and talents of individuals are what gives UK PLC its USP.

Darius is the editor of HRreview. He has previously worked as a finance reporter for the Daily Express. He studied his journalism masters at Press Association Training and graduated from the University of York with a degree in History.

Latest news

Lucy Standing: Older workers are back in the centre of the hiring debate – ready to lead the response?

For HR leaders, the argument is simple: the people being filtered out of your hiring process are not past their best.

One in 10 women quit work after pregnancy loss, report finds

Research suggests inconsistent workplace support following pregnancy loss and maternity leave is contributing to resignations and poorer mental wellbeing.

Fear of becoming obsolete grips workers as AI reshapes careers

More than two in five workers worry their skills could become outdated as AI reshapes hiring demands and increases pressure to keep learning.

Ford rehires 350 engineers after AI fails to deliver

Carmaker says veteran engineers have helped improve quality, mentor younger staff and retrain AI systems after automated checks fell short.
- Advertisement -

Low harassment reporting may hide workplace misconduct, employers warned

Low workplace harassment reporting rates may reflect a lack of trust in reporting systems rather than an absence of misconduct, new research suggests.

Jennifer Liston-Smith joins Halo Workplace Nurseries board

HRreview columnist Jennifer Liston-Smith has joined Halo Workplace Nurseries as chief purpose officer to help develop its workplace nursery compliance platform.

Must read

Julian Panter: How can smarter technology help recruiters make better data-driven decisions?

"Regardless of which sector you work in, there’s a minefield of data just waiting to be unlocked."

Rachel Arkle: Embedding mindfulness into daily life

This month sees the highest number of google searches ever recorded for the term “Mindfulness.” Mindfulness remains a big deal, with the flurry of media attention continuing to grow year on year. However, despite this popularity how many of us really understand what it’s all about. And perhaps more importantly how to integrate it into our working life?
- Advertisement -

You might also likeRELATED
Recommended to you