Differences in productivity growth rates across countries at the total economy level cannot be explained by differences in economic structures alone as even at the sectoral level significant differences in productivity growth exist across countries; although in general, in most countries, growth rates in the manufacturing sector have typically outpaced those in the services sector.
Compared with pre-crisis rates, labour productivity in manufacturing slowed in most OECD countries after the crisis, particularly in the Czech Republic, Finland, Hungary, Korea, Poland, Sweden and the United States. Between 2010 and 2017, labour productivity growth rates in manufacturing ranged from minus 0.6% in the United States to 5.1% in the Slovak Republic. In Ireland, corporate restructuring, including through the relocation of firms with significant intellectual property assets and aircraft leasing companies, led to significant increases in labour productivity in 2015.
In business sector services, labour productivity also slowed after the crisis, notably in Estonia, Greece, Hungary, Latvia, and, to a lesser extent, the United Kingdom. Growth rates of labour productivity in business sector services ranged from minus 3.7% in Greece to 5.8% in Costa Rica between 2010 and 2017.