Over the past 15 years, labour productivity growth was almost entirely driven by manufacturing and business sector services. In the case of manufacturing, this reflects the typically higher productivity growth rates of the sector. In the case of business sector services, the strong contribution also reflects its increasing share in the overall economy. Excluding real estate, business sector services account for about 35 to 50% of total value added and total employment across OECD countries.
When contributions to business sector productivity growth are analysed before and after the crisis, important differences arise. In the Czech Republic, Finland, Hungary, Korea, Slovenia, the Slovak Republic, Sweden and the United States, the productivity slowdown was mainly driven by lower contributions from the manufacturing sector compared with the pre-crisis period. In the Baltic States, Belgium, Greece, Hungary, Luxembourg and the United Kingdom, the slowdown was driven by lower contributions from business sector services.