New Zealanders work longer hours than the average of their peers in other developed countries but produce a fifth less, according to a Productivity Commission report that finds little evidence the situation is improving.
On average, New Zealanders work 15 per cent longer than the Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development as a whole and produce about 20 per cent less output per hour worked, according to the commission's report 'Productivity by the numbers: The New Zealand Experience'.
See a shorter summary of the report here.
The report suggests low-productive economies in theory catch up to those on the 'frontier' or leading the charge as new technologies, capital and ideas flow across borders. But that hasn't been the case for New Zealand.
"At the aggregate level, New Zealand's productivity performance shows no evidence of catching up, with labour productivity declining relative to other OECD countries for a number of decades," the report says. "So despite having one of the lowest levels of labour productivity in the OECD in the 1980s, labour productivity growth in New Zealand has still been among the lowest."