Slowing Productivity Growth Seen As Hopeful Sign
By wchung | 10 Apr, 2026
Productivity grew at a slower rate in the first three months of the year than previously thought, a possible sign that businesses are reaching the limits of their ability to boost output with fewer workers.
The Labor Department says productivity advanced at an annual rate of 2.8 percent in the January-March period. That is the slowest pace in a year and much lower than the 3.6 percent that the government initially reported a month ago. Labor costs still declined but at a slower 1.3 percent annual rate instead of the 1.6 percent drop initially estimated.
A slowing in productivity gains could actually be good news for the economy. It would mean that businesses have ended the heavy layoffs that were occurring during the depths of the recession.
MARTIN CRUTSINGER, AP Economics Writer WASHINGTON
Recent Articles
- Vance Leaves for Islamabad, Iran Renews Demands, Trump Trash Talks
- ICE Launches Probe of Birth Tourism Schemes
- Trump Economy Sets New Record Low in Consumer Sentiment
- OpenAI CEO Sam Altman's Home Targeted with Molotov Cocktail, Suspect Arrested
- Next-Gen Nuclear Power Gets Boost from Big Tech Amid AI Boom
- Trump's Temporary 10% Global Tariffs Under Fire at US Trade Court
- Snap's Specs AI Smart Glasses to Use Qualcomm Chips
- Chile Copper Convention Draws Lithium Industry
- Vingroup Inks Deal for $6.5 Billion Investment in India's Maharashtra State
- Ceasefire Sets Oil for Biggest Weekly Loss in 10 Months
