Labour productivity growth varies substantially across business sector services. In the pre-crisis period, services that are traded internationally and thus with a higher exposure to international competition, such as information and communication services and finance and insurance activities, showed labour productivity growth rates that were as high as or even higher than those in the manufacturing sector. However, post the crisis, labour productivity growth in manufacturing was higher in most countries than in finance and insurance, and information and communication services.
Labour productivity growth decelerated significantly in finance and insurance services in most countries, with negative growth rates in countries whose banking sectors were severely hit by the crisis, such as Iceland, Portugal, Spain and the United Kingdom. Productivity growth also slowed considerably in information and communication services, especially in Austria, Estonia, Greece, Hungary, Latvia, Luxembourg, the Netherlands, Norway, the Slovak Republic and the United States. In Ireland, high labour productivity growth in information and communication services in the post-crisis period reflects increasing flows of high-tech foreign direct investment of IT multinationals.