Find a copy online
Links to this item
Find a copy in the library
Finding libraries that hold this item...
Details
Genre/Form: | Electronic books |
---|---|
Material Type: | Document, Internet resource |
Document Type: | Internet Resource, Computer File |
All Authors / Contributors: |
Ricardo de Avillez; Christopher Ross; Centre for the Study of Living Standards. |
OCLC Number: | 758080300 |
Notes: | "April 2011." |
Description: | 1 online resource (170 pages) : illustrations, digital file. |
Contents: | IX. An analysis of Saskatchewan's productivity, 1997-2007: capital intensity growth drives strong labour productivity performance. i. Industry composition by nominal GDP and total hours worked; ii. Labour productivity; iii. Capital productivity; iv. Multifactor productivity; v. Capital intensity; vi. Labour quality; vii. Sources of labour productivity growth in the market sector; viii. Sources of labour productivity level gap by industry; ix. Conclusion -- An analysis of Alberta's productivity, 1997-2007: failling productivity in mining, and oil and gas extraction severely dampens market sector labour productivity growth. i. Industry composition by nominal GDP and total hours worked; ii. Labour productivity; iii. Capital productivity; iv. Multifactor productivity; v. Capital intensity; vi. Labour quality; vii. Sources of labour productivity growth in the market sector; viii. Sources of labour productivity level gap by industry; ix. Conclusion -- XI. An analysis of British Columbia's productivity, 1997-2007: manufacturing shines, despit overall sub-par performance. i. Industry composition by nominal GDP and total hours worked; ii. Labour productivity; iii. Capital productivity; iv. Multifactor productivity; v. Capital intensity; vi. Labour quality; vii. Sources of labour productivity growth in the market sector; viii. Sources of labour productivity level gap by industry; ix. Conclusion -- Conclusion. References; Appendix. A growth accounting framework. Abstract -- Executive summary -- I. Basic concepts, methodology and data sources. Basic concepts; Methodology and data sources -- II. An analysis of Newfoundland and Labrador's productivity, 1997-2007: mining, and oil and gas extraction drives strong productivity growth. i. Industry composition by nominal GDP and total hours worked; ii. Labour productivity; iii. Capital productivity; iv. Multifactor productivity; v. Capital intensity; vi. Labour quality; vii. Sources of labour productivity growth in the market sector; viii. Sources of labour productivity level gap by industry; ix. Conclusion -- III. An analysis of Prince Edward Island's productivity, 1997-2007: falling multifactor productivity dampens labour productivity growth. i. Industry composition by nominal GDP and total hours worked; ii. Labour productivity; iii. Capital productivity; iv. Multifactor productivity; v. Capital intensity; vi. Labour quality; vii. Sources of labour productivity growth in the market sector; viii. Sources of labour productivity level gap by industry; ix. Conclusion -- IV. An analysis of Nova Scotia's productivity performance, 1997-2007: strong growth, low levels. i. Industry composition by nominal GDP and total hours worked; ii. Labour productivity; iii. Capital productivity; iv. Multifactor productivity; v. Capital intensity; vi. Labour quality; vii. Sources of labour productivity growth in the market sector; viii. Sources of labour productivity level differential by industry; ix. Conclusion. V. An analysis of New Brunswick's productivity performance, 1997-2007: labour productivity driven by capital intensity growth. i. Industry composition by nominal GDP and total hours worked; ii. Labour productivity; iii. Capital productivity; iv. Multifactor productivity; v. Capital intensity; vi. Labour quality; vii. Sources of labour productivity growth in the market sector; viii. Source of labour productivity level differential by industry; ix. Conclusion -- VI. An analysis of Quebec's productivity performance, 1997-2007: Superior multifactor productivity growth, weak capital intensity growth. i. Industry composition by nominal GDP and total hours worked; ii. Labour productivity; iii. Capital productivity; iv. Multifactor productivity; v. Capital intensity; vi. Labour quality; vii. Sources of labour productivity growth in the market sector; viii. Sources of labour productivity level differential by industry; ix. Conclusion -- VII. An analysis of Ontario's productivity, 1007-2007: high productivity levels, but average productivity growth. i. Industry composition by nominal GDP and total hours worked; ii. Labour productivity; iii. Capital productivity; iv. Multifactor productivity; v. Capital intensity; vi. Labour quality; vii. Sources of labour productivity growth in the market sector; viii. Sources of labour productivity level gap by industry; ix. Conclusion -- VIII. An analysis of Manitoba's productivity, 1997-2007: above average labour productivity growth lead to convergence towards the national level. i. Industry composition by nominal GDP and total hours worked; ii. Labour productivity; iii. Capital productivity; iv. Multifactor productivity; v. Capital intensity; vi. Labour quality; vii. Sources of labour productivity growth in the market sector; viii. Sources of labour productivity level gap by industry; ix. Conclusion. |
Series Title: | CSLS research report, 2011-03. |
Responsibility: | Ricardo de Avillez and Christopher Ross. |
More information: |
Abstract:
This article, based on the CSLS provincial productivity database, provides a portrait of the productivity performance of the ten Canadian provinces over the 1997-2007 period.
Reviews
User-contributed reviews
Add a review and share your thoughts with other readers.
Be the first.
Add a review and share your thoughts with other readers.
Be the first.


Tags
Add tags for "A synthesis of the CSLS provincial productivity reports, 1997-2007".
Be the first.