{"id":252927,"date":"2025-11-09T11:07:10","date_gmt":"2025-11-09T11:07:10","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.newsbeep.com\/uk\/252927\/"},"modified":"2025-11-09T11:07:10","modified_gmt":"2025-11-09T11:07:10","slug":"the-uk-has-a-productivity-problem-cuts-wont-fix-it","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.newsbeep.com\/uk\/252927\/","title":{"rendered":"The UK has a productivity problem. Cuts won\u2019t fix it"},"content":{"rendered":"<p role=\"text\" tabindex=\"0\" class=\"is_Paragraph font_caslonIonic _dsp-inline _bxs-border-box _ww-break-word _mt-0px _mr-0px _mb-0px _ml-0px _ff-f-family _fw-f-weight-3048 _fs-f-size-18 _lh-f-lineHeigh3500605 _col-c-grey_600 _select-auto _ws-normal drop-cap-paragraph\">The UK government employs more than 6 million people. Paying them will cost about \u00a3300bn this year. The total cost of providing public services \u2013 the NHS, prisons, the police, schools, the army, and so on \u2013 is more than double that. As taxes rise (again), voters might reasonably ask whether their money is being spent efficiently.<\/p>\n<p role=\"text\" tabindex=\"0\" class=\"is_Paragraph font_caslonIonic _dsp-inline _bxs-border-box _ww-break-word _mt-0px _mr-0px _mb-0px _ml-0px _ff-f-family _fw-f-weight-3048 _fs-f-size-18 _lh-f-lineHeigh3500605 _col-c-grey_600 _select-auto _ws-normal\">To get a grip on that question, we need to measure what the government gets in return for all that spending, which means we need to measure what those 6 million public workers are producing. This is harder than it might sound.<\/p>\n<p>NewslettersRegister to hear the latest from the Observer<a role=\"link\" tabindex=\"0\" data-disable-theme=\"true\" class=\"is_Anchor font_body _bxs-border-box _ww-break-word _ws-pre-wrap _mt-0px _mr-0px _mb-0px _ml-0px _fs-f-size-true _col-c-grey_600 _dsp-inline-flex _items-center _cur-pointer _self-flex-end is_ButtonUnderlined \"\/><\/p>\n<p role=\"text\" tabindex=\"0\" class=\"is_Paragraph font_caslonIonic _dsp-inline _bxs-border-box _ww-break-word _mt-0px _mr-0px _mb-0px _ml-0px _ff-f-family _fw-f-weight-7048 _fs-f-size-16 _lh-f-lineHeigh3500603 _col-c-grey_600 _select-auto _ws-normal _text-left\">Every Weekday<\/p>\n<p role=\"text\" tabindex=\"0\" class=\"is_Paragraph font_caslonIonic _dsp-inline _bxs-border-box _ww-break-word _mt-0px _mr-0px _mb-0px _ml-0px _ff-f-family _fw-f-weight-3048 _fs-f-size-18 _lh-f-lineHeigh3500605 _col-c-grey_600 _select-auto _ws-normal _text-left _shrink-1\">Clear, calm analysis on the stories driving the day\u2019s news.<\/p>\n<p role=\"text\" tabindex=\"0\" class=\"is_Paragraph font_caslonIonic _dsp-inline _bxs-border-box _ww-break-word _mt-0px _mr-0px _mb-0px _ml-0px _ff-f-family _fw-f-weight-7048 _fs-f-size-16 _lh-f-lineHeigh3500603 _col-c-grey_600 _select-auto _ws-normal _text-left\">Every Weekday<\/p>\n<p role=\"text\" tabindex=\"0\" class=\"is_Paragraph font_caslonIonic _dsp-inline _bxs-border-box _ww-break-word _mt-0px _mr-0px _mb-0px _ml-0px _ff-f-family _fw-f-weight-3048 _fs-f-size-18 _lh-f-lineHeigh3500605 _col-c-grey_600 _select-auto _ws-normal _text-left _shrink-1\">The very best of our journalism, reviews and ideas \u2013 curated each day.<\/p>\n<p role=\"text\" tabindex=\"0\" class=\"is_Paragraph font_caslonIonic _dsp-inline _bxs-border-box _ww-break-word _mt-0px _mr-0px _mb-0px _ml-0px _ff-f-family _fw-f-weight-7048 _fs-f-size-16 _lh-f-lineHeigh3500603 _col-c-grey_600 _select-auto _ws-normal _text-left\">Weekly<\/p>\n<p role=\"text\" tabindex=\"0\" class=\"is_Paragraph font_caslonIonic _dsp-inline _bxs-border-box _ww-break-word _mt-0px _mr-0px _mb-0px _ml-0px _ff-f-family _fw-f-weight-3048 _fs-f-size-18 _lh-f-lineHeigh3500605 _col-c-grey_600 _select-auto _ws-normal _text-left _shrink-1\">A dispatch from The Observer\u2019s kitchen table \u2013 from Nigel Slater\u2019s recipes to interviews, features and hot tips.<\/p>\n<p role=\"text\" tabindex=\"0\" class=\"is_Paragraph font_caslonDoric _dsp-inline _bxs-border-box _ww-break-word _mt-t-space-8 _mr-0px _mb-t-space-16 _ml-0px _ff-f-family _fw-f-weight-4048 _fs-f-size-14 _lh-f-lineHeigh3500599 _col-c-black _select-auto _ws-normal\">For information about how The Observer protects your data, read our<a role=\"link\" aria-label=\"Privacy Policy Link\" href=\"https:\/\/observer.co.uk\/policy\/privacy\" class=\"is_Anchor font_body _dsp-inline _bxs-border-box _ww-break-word _ws-pre-wrap _mt-0px _mr-0px _mb-0px _ml-0px _fs-f-size-true _cur-pointer\" rel=\"nofollow noopener\" target=\"_blank\">Privacy Policy<\/a><\/p>\n<p role=\"text\" tabindex=\"0\" class=\"is_Paragraph font_caslonIonic _dsp-inline _bxs-border-box _ww-break-word _mt-0px _mr-0px _mb-0px _ml-0px _ff-f-family _fw-f-weight-3048 _fs-f-size-18 _lh-f-lineHeigh3500605 _col-c-grey_600 _select-auto _ws-normal\">Let\u2019s start with a relatively simple example. How do you measure the output of a surgeon working for the NHS? You might start by counting how many operations they carry out. Perhaps you\u2019d make some sort of adjustment for the complexity of each operation, or their success rate in keeping patients alive. Fiddly, perhaps, but doable.<\/p>\n<p role=\"text\" tabindex=\"0\" class=\"is_Paragraph font_caslonIonic _dsp-inline _bxs-border-box _ww-break-word _mt-0px _mr-0px _mb-0px _ml-0px _ff-f-family _fw-f-weight-3048 _fs-f-size-18 _lh-f-lineHeigh3500605 _col-c-grey_600 _select-auto _ws-normal\">What about a police officer? Do you measure their output as the number of arrests made? Or should it be the number of crimes they prevent from happening in the first place by patrolling the streets? What about a soldier? Or a judge? It can become very difficult very quickly.<\/p>\n<p>Claiming tens of billions of pounds in cuts could be found easily through a crackdown on \u2018waste\u2019 is not helpful or serious<\/p>\n<p role=\"text\" tabindex=\"0\" class=\"is_Paragraph font_caslonIonic _dsp-inline _bxs-border-box _ww-break-word _mt-0px _mr-0px _mb-0px _ml-0px _ff-f-family _fw-f-weight-3048 _fs-f-size-18 _lh-f-lineHeigh3500605 _col-c-grey_600 _select-auto _ws-normal\">These are the sorts of conundrums that the folks at the Office for National Statistics (ONS) have to confront when building their estimates of public service productivity \u2013 the latest set was published last week. Because it\u2019s an unusual exercise, requiring all sorts of assumptions, we should interpret the figures with caution. They nonetheless provide some interesting insights.<\/p>\n<p role=\"text\" tabindex=\"0\" class=\"is_Paragraph font_caslonIonic _dsp-inline _bxs-border-box _ww-break-word _mt-0px _mr-0px _mb-0px _ml-0px _ff-f-family _fw-f-weight-3048 _fs-f-size-18 _lh-f-lineHeigh3500605 _col-c-grey_600 _select-auto _ws-normal\">There was some good news for sceptical taxpayers: the ONS has revised up its previous estimates, and now thinks that public service productivity increased for the fourth consecutive year in 2024.<\/p>\n<p role=\"text\" tabindex=\"0\" class=\"is_Paragraph font_caslonIonic _dsp-inline _bxs-border-box _ww-break-word _mt-0px _mr-0px _mb-0px _ml-0px _ff-f-family _fw-f-weight-3048 _fs-f-size-18 _lh-f-lineHeigh3500605 _col-c-grey_600 _select-auto _ws-normal\">There was also some bad news: the ONS thinks that public services are still 3% less productive than they were before the pandemic, and only ever-so-slightly more productive than in 1997. We shouldn\u2019t read too much into this, not least as in some cases (such as the armed forces), the ONS decides that it is too difficult to estimate productivity and simply assumes zero productivity growth. But it\u2019s hardly a barnstorming performance.<\/p>\n<p role=\"text\" tabindex=\"0\" class=\"is_Paragraph font_caslonIonic _dsp-inline _bxs-border-box _ww-break-word _mt-0px _mr-0px _mb-0px _ml-0px _ff-f-family _fw-f-weight-3048 _fs-f-size-18 _lh-f-lineHeigh3500605 _col-c-grey_600 _select-auto _ws-normal\">Because the NHS is so big, accounting for about \u00a31 in every \u00a35 government spends, and about 8% of the entire economy, the productivity of the health service plays an outsized role in driving these trends. It has generally fared a bit better in productivity terms \u2013 until recently.<\/p>\n<p role=\"text\" tabindex=\"0\" class=\"is_Paragraph font_caslonIonic _dsp-inline _bxs-border-box _ww-break-word _mt-0px _mr-0px _mb-0px _ml-0px _ff-f-family _fw-f-weight-3048 _fs-f-size-18 _lh-f-lineHeigh3500605 _col-c-grey_600 _select-auto _ws-normal\">According to the ONS, healthcare productivity didn\u2019t increase at all in 2024, has fallen slightly in 2025, and is still 8% lower than pre-Covid. For a government with ambitions to get waiting lists and times down, it\u2019s far from ideal that the health service now seems to require more funding and more staff to provide the same level of service as it did in 2019.<\/p>\n<p role=\"text\" tabindex=\"0\" class=\"is_Paragraph font_caslonIonic _dsp-inline _bxs-border-box _ww-break-word _mt-0px _mr-0px _mb-0px _ml-0px _ff-f-family _fw-f-weight-3048 _fs-f-size-18 _lh-f-lineHeigh3500605 _col-c-grey_600 _select-auto _ws-normal\">What should we make of this? On the one hand, it suggests that there\u2019s still some scope for catch-up growth. Just getting back to where we were before the pandemic would be a major gain for a government with grand ambitions for public service improvements but limited cash to throw around.<\/p>\n<p role=\"text\" tabindex=\"0\" class=\"is_Paragraph font_caslonIonic _dsp-inline _bxs-border-box _ww-break-word _mt-0px _mr-0px _mb-0px _ml-0px _ff-f-family _fw-f-weight-3048 _fs-f-size-18 _lh-f-lineHeigh3500605 _col-c-grey_600 _select-auto _ws-normal\">On the other hand, the experience of the past quarter of a century shows that increasing the productivity of the public sector is painfully difficult. This partly reflects the labour-intensive, human-focused nature of much public sector work: there are only so many ways to check a bedridden patient for pressure sores, or to help an elderly person get dressed. The scope for productivity gains there is simply more limited than in, say, manufacturing.<\/p>\n<p role=\"text\" tabindex=\"0\" class=\"is_Paragraph font_caslonIonic _dsp-inline _bxs-border-box _ww-break-word _mt-0px _mr-0px _mb-0px _ml-0px _ff-f-family _fw-f-weight-3048 _fs-f-size-18 _lh-f-lineHeigh3500605 _col-c-grey_600 _select-auto _ws-normal\">Yet, as economy-wide wages grow due to productivity improvements elsewhere, wages for nurses and care workers also need to rise to continue to attract workers to those roles. The result is that the cost of providing public services tends to grow faster than other prices, and grows to take up an increasing share of national income \u2013 something economists call the Baumol effect.<\/p>\n<p role=\"text\" tabindex=\"0\" class=\"is_Paragraph font_caslonIonic _dsp-inline _bxs-border-box _ww-break-word _mt-0px _mr-0px _mb-0px _ml-0px _ff-f-family _fw-f-weight-3048 _fs-f-size-18 _lh-f-lineHeigh3500605 _col-c-grey_600 _select-auto _ws-normal\">Now the Baumol effect doesn\u2019t get our public services off the hook entirely. It can\u2019t explain the post-pandemic fall-off in NHS productivity, for instance, which we should interrogate and try to correct. We absolutely should explore whether new technologies, and in particular AI, can unlock the sorts of public sector productivity gains that have previously eluded us.<\/p>\n<p role=\"text\" tabindex=\"0\" class=\"is_Paragraph font_caslonIonic _dsp-inline _bxs-border-box _ww-break-word _mt-0px _mr-0px _mb-0px _ml-0px _ff-f-family _fw-f-weight-3048 _fs-f-size-18 _lh-f-lineHeigh3500605 _col-c-grey_600 _select-auto _ws-normal\">But it does suggest that we need a dose of realism about the scale of productivity improvements that we might expect from government, and the sorts of savings that could be unlocked. Spending plans for the next few years are already based on punchy productivity assumptions and ambitious efficiency savings.<\/p>\n<p role=\"text\" tabindex=\"0\" class=\"is_Paragraph font_caslonIonic _dsp-inline _bxs-border-box _ww-break-word _mt-0px _mr-0px _mb-0px _ml-0px _ff-f-family _fw-f-weight-3048 _fs-f-size-18 _lh-f-lineHeigh3500605 _col-c-grey_600 _select-auto _ws-normal\">Claiming, as some do, that tens of billions of pounds in further cuts could be found easily through a crackdown on \u201cwaste\u201d is not a helpful or serious contribution to the debate. It merely indicates an unwillingness to confront tough fiscal choices. And the UK certainly faces plenty of those.<\/p>\n<p role=\"text\" tabindex=\"0\" class=\"is_Paragraph font_caslonIonic _dsp-inline _bxs-border-box _ww-break-word _mt-0px _mr-0px _mb-0px _ml-0px _ff-f-family _fw-f-weight-3048 _fs-f-size-18 _lh-f-lineHeigh3500605 _col-c-grey_600 _select-auto _ws-normal\">Ben Zaranko is associate director of the Institute for Fiscal Studies<\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"The UK government employs more than 6 million people. Paying them will cost about \u00a3300bn this year. The&hellip;\n","protected":false},"author":2,"featured_media":252928,"comment_status":"","ping_status":"","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"footnotes":""},"categories":[11],"tags":[84,1294,104,56,54,55],"class_list":{"0":"post-252927","1":"post","2":"type-post","3":"status-publish","4":"format-standard","5":"has-post-thumbnail","7":"category-economy","8":"tag-business","9":"tag-economy","10":"tag-nhs","11":"tag-uk","12":"tag-united-kingdom","13":"tag-unitedkingdom"},"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.newsbeep.com\/uk\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/252927","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.newsbeep.com\/uk\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.newsbeep.com\/uk\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.newsbeep.com\/uk\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/2"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.newsbeep.com\/uk\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/comments?post=252927"}],"version-history":[{"count":0,"href":"https:\/\/www.newsbeep.com\/uk\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/252927\/revisions"}],"wp:featuredmedia":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.newsbeep.com\/uk\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media\/252928"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.newsbeep.com\/uk\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=252927"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.newsbeep.com\/uk\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/categories?post=252927"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.newsbeep.com\/uk\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/tags?post=252927"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}