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			"NOYB"  wrote in message 
		
		
		
		
		
		
		
		
	
	m... "jps" wrote in message ... "JohnH" wrote in message ... Productivity is a rate, usually represented as a fraction, e.g. 37 widgets/one hour. Productivity is not measured by reductions or increases in hourly pay. What about database entry? Is that a widget too? Is productivity based only upon manufacturing? Productivity is measured as Gross Domestic Product adjusted for inflation divided by the total number of hours worked. If an hourly worker is working more than 40 hours in a week, then those additional hours are being reported...and they would *decrease* productivity if GDP stayed the same. However, productivity is *increasing*...so your theory is flat-out wrong. Jesus ****ing Christ!!! Try to follow along here doc. If a 40 hour worker puts in additional time but the company doesn't pay for it, they don't report the worker having worked 50 or 60 hours. Everyone here seems to think that productivity only involved widgets. What about programmers? They don't produce widgets, they produce code that gets paid for when it's delivered. If workers are putting in 60 hours a week on a 40 hour a week salary, the company they work for is still going to report a 40 hour week, no? That'd net out to a productivity gain. So tell me how my theory is wrong?  | 
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