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Lecture 02 Introduction and Concept of Productivity

This document discusses the concepts of productivity and work system design. It defines productivity as the ratio of output to input and notes it is a measure of efficiency. Productivity requires constant improvement and adaptation to changing conditions. The document discusses misconceptions about productivity and how it differs from production, noting that increased production does not always mean increased productivity. Productivity is viewed differently by economists, accountants, behavioral scientists and engineers.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
187 views11 pages

Lecture 02 Introduction and Concept of Productivity

This document discusses the concepts of productivity and work system design. It defines productivity as the ratio of output to input and notes it is a measure of efficiency. Productivity requires constant improvement and adaptation to changing conditions. The document discusses misconceptions about productivity and how it differs from production, noting that increased production does not always mean increased productivity. Productivity is viewed differently by economists, accountants, behavioral scientists and engineers.

Uploaded by

rbansal
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Lesson 02

Work System Design


Introduction and Concept of Productivity

Dr. Inderdeep Singh


Department of Mechanical and Industrial Engineering

1
Productivity
 Productivity is an attitude of mind. It is the mentality of
progress of the constant improvements of that which exits.

 It is the certainty of being able to do better today than


yesterday and continuously.

 It is the constant adaption of economic and social life to


changing conditions.
-EPA(European Productivity Agency)
Production system

Source:- https://www.google.co.in/search?q=production+system&safe
Productivity Output and Input Examples

Examples of output Examples of input


 Accomplishment of a task  Labour force or man hours, man days
 Distance travelled  Area of land
 Volume of material or fluid
 Number of pieces produced  Units of power
 Time taken to carry out a job  Time etc.
 No. of customers served
Misconceptions about Productivity
Misunderstanding about productivity to the workers, higher productivity means
higher work load, higher efforts, more profits to owners and un-employment
and threat to job security etc.

There are several misconceptions :


• Productivity = Production
• Productivity means only Labor Productivity
• Productivity is relevant only in manufacturing not relevant elsewhere
• Productivity is only for commercial enterprises and not for the public

Source: Lecture of T.M.JAYASEKERA , Managing Director -Innovative Skills (Pvt.) Ltd


Misconceptions about Productivity
 Productivity can be increased by getting people to work harder
TRUE TO SOME EXTENT

 Productivity can be increased by cutting costs across the company

 Productivity is directly related to profits. In other words a


profitable organization is always productive

Source:Lecture of T.M.JAYASEKERA , Managing Director -Innovative Skills (Pvt.) Ltd

6
Introduction
 Productivity is a measure of the efficiency of production.

 Productivity is the ratio of what is produced to what is


required to produce it.

 Productivity is the determination of the efficiency of an


enterprise to convert its variable resources into useful
finished goods and services.
Source: https://www.slideshare.net/vish25/what-is-productivity
Concept of Productivity
 International Labour Organization (ILO) defines productivity
as the ratio between “output of work” to “input of resource”

 It is the concept that guides the management of production


system

 It is an indicator of how well the factors of production (land,


capital, labour and energy) are utilized.
Productivity Concepts as Viewed by
Different People
Ratio of output to input (partial productivity
ECONOMIST measures and total productivity measures)

ACCOUNTANTS Financial ratios , Budgetary variances

BEHAVIOURAL
SCIENTISTS Labour utilization (Man days)

Capacity utilization , Production per man hour,


ENGINEERS
Manpower efficiency
Source: Industrial Engineering and Production Management by M. Telsang, S. Chand Publication
How is Production different from
Productivity?
 Production is related to the activity of producing goods or
services. It is a process of converting input into value-added
output

 Productivity is related to the efficient utilization of input


resources to produce output in the form of value added goods or
services
How is Production different from
Productivity?
Examples

“A” spends 90 Rupees, makes 10 products, productivity = 10/90 = 0.111


“B” spends 280 Rupees, makes 30 products, productivity = 30/280 = 0.107
“C” spends 350 Rupees, makes 40 products, productivity = 40/350 = 0.114

Hence, Increase in production does not necessarily mean increase in productivity

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