Productivity languished in the year to March 2011, with labour productivity slipping, the capital-to-labour ratio declining and multi-factor productivity unchanged.
Statistics New Zealand's productivity data cover around 80 per cent of the economy, the main exclusions being government services such as health, education and administration where output is hard to measure independently of inputs.
In the year to March 2011 the output of that "measured sector" rose 0.8 per cent - an improvement on the scant 0.1 per cent recorded on average over the five years to March 2011, which included the 2008/09 recession.
But in contrast to the two previous years in which it declined, the input of labour rose 0.9 per cent, outstripping the growth in output.
The result is that labour productivity, or output per hour worked, fell 0.1 per cent, after rising 3.5 per cent the previous year.