Productivity mystifies economists and central bankers- not business- for good reasons.

We are all well aware of how the micro-processor and its applications in information technology have changed the way we work or play. Robots have changed fundamentally the process of extracting or converting raw materials and distributing the goods and services we consume in ways that astonish and amaze us. We worry about how they appear to replace people like ourselves in the work place.

The power of mobile devices to connect us to our customers, colleagues, friends and information and entertainment of all kinds grows continuously, as does our dependence on them. Young people live happily (we hope) almost exclusively in their cyber worlds.

But all this information technology is not showing up in productivity measures – that is output per hour of work – as one surely thinks it should or would. All those factories, warehouses, cargo liners or railroads and ports with fewer workers and ever more sophisticated machines and devices that support those with jobs, must surely raise the ratio of what is produced to the number of person-hours employers provide compensation in wages and benefits for. The numbers indicate otherwise.

Alan S Blinder, a distinguished academic economist, Professor of Economics and Public Affairs at Princeton University and recent former vice-chairman of the Federal Reserve, writes in the on-line Wall Street Journal of 24 November of The Unsettling Mystery of Productivity, with the sub-title: Since 2010 US productivity has grown at a miserable rate. And no one, not even the Fed seems to understand why.

Blinder refers to the available history of productivity. Over 143 years of records show that the US has increased measured output per person hour employed outside of the farms by an average 2.3% p.a. That is, output per worker has increased nearly 26 times since 1870. Clearly the more valuable output workers are expected to produce, the greater real benefits (wages) they may be able to earn from employers competing for their more valuable services. Between 1948 and 1973, described as the golden age of productivity growth productivity grew by an average 2.8% p.a – yet between 1973 and 1995 it grew by only 1.4% p.a on average. It then picked up again growing by 2.6% p.a between 1996 and 2010 only to slow down to a miserable 0.7% p.a on average since; for reasons nobody, according to Blinder, seems to know why.

In South Africa productivity as calculated by the Reserve Bank has grown, on average, by a mere 1.02%p.a since 1970 and by 1.92% p.a on average between 2010- 2013. But in the seventies the price of gold doubled and doubled again allowing the mines to profitably reduce the average grade of ore they mined and extend the lives of the mines More rock was extracted expensively from the bowels of the earth but less gold was produced with more workers – meaning lower productivity and much improved profitabilty. Since 1995 productivity in SA has grown by 2.8% p.a on average despite the recent slowdown.

The unpredictability of productivity matters to the Fed and the Reserve Bank because their task is to align aggregate demand for goods services and labour to their potential supplies, using the tools of interest rate settings and money creation at their command. Not too much and not too little demand is called for. Too much means inflation – too little means deflation, which is regarded as equally or even more dangerous to well being. But knowing just how much means being able to predict potential supply upon which productivity growth would have had an all important bearing. Such productivity forecasting powers seems unavailable, so greatly complicating the task of monetary policy.

The problem to my mind is a measurement problem. The issues involved in converting business revenues, measured in dollars of the day, into equivalent volumes that can be compared over time. Productivity is the ratio of real output, real volumes of goods and services produced and charged for, to the number of person hours needed to produce them. But how is one to compare the value of a good or service produced 20 years ago with its equivalent today? An aspirin produced then is the same quality as an aspirin taken 30 years ago. But the same could not be said of a life saving drug available today that was not on the pharmacy shelves 30 years ago. The quality of medical care, given these technological gains has increased almost immeasurably. What then does the so called inflation of medical costs included in the CPI mean when what is being paid and charged for are much improved medical benefits? You are not comparing like with like, apples with apples, aspirins with aspirins.

Nor can an off the shelf or off the internet personal computer or laptop today be compared with those of 30 years ago when access to the internet was first initiated. They have the computing power that would have filled a large office with mainframes 20 years ago. And the same could be said of television monitors or motor vehicles or so many devices that are incomparable in quality with the options available then, perhaps infinitely better given that the ordinary of today would have been unimaginable not so long ago. A similar observation can be made of a modern automated machine tool when compared to the machines utilised before.

Therefore, if we are to compare real output over time we have to allow for changes in quality in order to generate an appropriate series of prices and what indeed the benefits received cost the consumer. Prices have to be quality adjusted if any sense is to be made of the volume of output produced and measured over time. Volume of output calculated for the purposes of measuring real output for GDP or productivity estimates is revenue in money of the day earned by businesses divided by what is hoped is a realistic measure of prices. If quality has improved dramatically or indeed infinitely in the case of goods or services previously unknown, this price denominator, known by economists as a deflator (deflating nominal values into real equivalents) has surely to take on a very large number with a proportionately large impact on real volumes. The Fed is conscious of the danger of underestimating quality gains regards the inflation it targets of less than 2% per annum as effectively deflation.

Can we have any confidence at all in the numbers attached to deflators that reduce the revenues of businesses to equivalent volumes or convert nominal GDP with its real equivalent? I would suggest that we can very easily underestimate quality gains and hence over estimate the numbers called deflators. Quality adjusted prices may be vastly lower than they are estimated to be. If so volumes produced would be much higher and productivity gains much greater than estimated. The mystery to be solved is an appropriate deflator especially for goods or services with infinitely higher computing power and value to their users. There may in fact be much more deflation about than is recognized. Hence monetary policy may be even tighter than it appears.

The closest relevant deflator I could find was for the prices charged by US retailers of appliances and electronic goods. This deflator, designed to measure the volume of these goods sold by the retailers with a base of 100 in 2009, had declined to 68.9 or some 37% over four years. In the US, the prices of all retail goods rose by 8% since 2009.

The closest equivalent deflator provided by Stats SA was for Furniture, Appliances and Electronic goods Retailers that showed a decline of 8.5% since 2009 while all retail prices rose by 23% over the same period.

Are these deflators and all the others that convert value to volume accurate enough to form the basis for productivity comparisons? One must doubt this. There is clearly enough room for error to add an average one or two per cent per annum to measured productivity growth.

But while such uncertainty about the relationship between price and quality changes may bother the economists and the Fed, they will be of little interest to the firms that produce goods and services. They will be hoping to add to profitability by managing, as best they can, the relationship between revenues and costs measured in money of the day, including the link between the money of the day costs of employing labour and what each employee may be adding to the top line. In fact employing more, relatively unproductive labour, may well be the more profitable option, depending on their cost of hire even if such employment maximizing decisions reduce productivity. The South African economy would do better if firms were hiring more low skilled less productive workers rather than making the efforts they do to raise the productivity of much better paid, but relatively few skilled workers with advanced equipment and superior data management.

It is be noted that while productivity is seemingly in decline, in the US profits as a share of output are at close to record levels. The impact of innovation on productivity and GDP may be mysterious given the difficulty of devising a suitable deflator. The influence on profitability would appear to be unambiguously helpful for shareholders.

And consumers of goods and services (known and unknown in abundant quantity) can be comforted that excess profits tend to be competed away and they will pay no more than it costs to supply them, costs that will include a required return on the capital employed by competing firms. The objective of business and their owners is to maximise profitability, not productivity. Real output and so real productivity are artifacts of economists and statisticians, not businesses, for which profits and return on capital are the key measures.

The Grinch who stole the low fuel price bonanza

Were it not for Eskom’s problems, the economy would now be cheering the impact of lower fuel prices.

The abrupt decline in the oil price shown in the chart below is potentially very good news for the SA economy.

These welcome trends have relieved the budgets of the average household and will encourage more spending. It has been the unwillingness and inability of households, who account for over 60% of all spending in SA, to spend more that has been such a drag on economic growth. In the quarter to September 2014, household spending grew at a below par real 1.3% annual rate, though this was an improvement on the 0.5% and 1.1% rates recorded in the two previous quarters of 2014. A lower petrol and diesel price will also reduce the cost of delivering these extra goods and services to households.

All of this should help add further downward pressure on the rate of inflation that over the past three months has fallen so sharply. We show the three month change in the CPI and Producer Price Index (PPI) below. Inflation over the past few months has declined sharply, making the prospect of higher short term interest rates much more unlikely and less threatening to spending by households.

It is also worth noting that the prices of many of the goods we export have held up better than the oil we import: about 20% of all imports. The ratio of the price of platinum and gold to the price of oil is shown below. In a relative sense the platinum we export now earns about 50% more than the oil we mostly import than it did only a few months ago. This is very helpful to the economy and its balance of trade. Over the longer term, as we also show back to 2010, these so called terms of foreign trade effects have not been generally favourable – oil was both absolutely and relative expensive until now.

The latest news about the state of the economy at November month end was mildly encouraging. Judged by vehicle sales and demands for cash – the two series we combine to make up our up to date Hard Number Index (HNI) – it seems that the economy has been gaining a little forward momentum. Numbers above 100 for this index indicate growth and higher numbers indicate that the speed is accelerating rather than decelerating. We compare our HNI to the Reserve Bank’s Coinciding Indicator of the Business Cycle that is also well above 100 and seemingly rising, though this series is only updated to August 2014 given its reliance on about 12 economic time series some of which are derived from sample surveys that are inevitably delayed.

The two series that make up the HNI are shown below. Unit vehicle sales appear to be holding up well and if current trends are sustained, will continue at current levels in 2015. To these should be added over 28 000 units exported in November that will be adding meaningfully to overall manufacturing activity.

The demands for notes, when adjusted for lower inflation, also seems to be confirming a cyclical recovery that we noticed last month. The recovery indicated in demands for cash to spend however, while welcome, can best be described as a slow one and hopefully will be a steady one.

If it were not for Eskom turning off the lights – apparently for a want of now much cheaper diesel to fuel peak generating capacity – we would all be feeling much more cheerful, as befits the season. How the impacts of cheaper fuel and less freely available electricity pan out will all be revealed in forthcoming economic activity and the measures of them. We watch and wait with the hope that Eskom can get more of its act together. Better still would be a growing realisation that reliance on one monopoly producer is a very bad idea. The risks of outages would be much lower if electricity generation from coal (and or other sources of fuel) would be better diversified.

The solution is to encourage the private sector to provide the additional capacity and for established capacity in the form of power plants to be sold off for what they can fetch in the market place. Such a willingness to sell off the faltering generating plants to well qualified operators of them would solve, at a stroke, the burden of additional debt that Eskom is imposing on the SA taxpayer debt ratings, revealed higher long term interest rates and a weaker rand. Such privatisation would also ensure much better management of electricity supply over the long run. They say evidence changes belief. The belief in public corporations must surely be highly challenging to the true believers in public ownership.

JSE performance: It’s a big tail wagging the friendly dog – but can the dog turn nasty?

The tail is Naspers – the dog is the JSE. Though, to describe the JSE as a dog, would be to do it an injustice given its good behaviour over the years. Naspers (NPN) – the media giant that derives much of its value from its Chinese internet associate Tencent – has been a major contributor to the performance of the JSE over recent years.

Its share price and market value has risen dramatically and as a result Naspers now contributes close to 10% of the market value of the JSE. The company is now worth R597bn and ranks as the third largest company listed on the JSE, behind British American Tobacco with a market cap of R1.287 trillion and SABMiller worth about R990.6bn (all market caps as at 20 November).

Naspers is moreover by far the largest company included in the JSE SWIX Index (with a 10.4% weighting) where the value of the company is adjusted for the proportion of shareholders in the company registered in SA1. The SWIX is the benchmark which many active SA Fund managers use to compare their performance and hope to beat. There are two other companies with a weight in the SWIAX of over 5%: MTN (7.62%) and Sasol (5.74%). The next largest weights are given to SABMiller (3.93%) and British American Tobacco (3.84%). In the figure below we compare the JSE All Share Index (ALSI) and the SWIX from its inception in 2002. The SWIX has outperformed the ALSI in recent years.

This difference in realised returns recently is largely explained by the larger weight of Industrials and Financials in the SWIX and the smaller weight in Resources companies, given the underperformance of Resources in recent years. The best returns on the JSE have come from companies with an increasingly large global footprint, of which NPN is the outstanding example. Others include Richemont, SABMiller, Aspen and British American Tobacco, all with large weights in the SWIX and somewhat lower weights in the JSE All Share Index. We like to separate these Global Consumer Plays that depend on the global economy from the other Industrial companies on the JSE that depend much more heavily on the fortunes of the SA economy.

In the figure below we compare the share prices of the five largest companies listed on the JSE based on a January 2011 starting point. The Naspers share price has moved well ahead of the large cap pack with mining company BHP Billiton proving the distinct underperformer. Note that the large cap strong performers are all companies catering to global consumers.

While the value of Naspers and the other Global Consumer Plays have increased dramatically in recent years, those of BHP Billiton and long time favourite Anglo American (AGL) have barely increased.

As a result of the stellar performance of Naspers the ALSI and the SWIX have come to dance increasingly to the tune played by Naspers. We compare recent daily moves of Naspers and the ALSI below. A good or bad day for Naspers (given the size of the company) will translate almost automatically into a good or bad day for the market as a whole, particularly in recent days when the Naspers movements have been particularly severe.

In other words, investors who track the JSE and the SWIX on a market cap weighted basis have become increasingly dependent on or vulnerable to the Naspers share price. Adding proportionately more Naspers to a JSE-based portfolio would have served investors very well. However a weight of as much as 10% in any one company will bring exposure to a great deal of firm specific risks – such a portfolio or benchmark that included Naspers at its full weight could not be regarded as well diversified or a low risk portfolio. The SWIX, with its large weight in Naspers, MTN and Sasol with over 20% of the Index in these three stocks, should not be regarded as a suitably well diversified benchmark.

An alternative way to calculate a representative market would be to calculate an equally weighted portfolio of the Top 30 most valuable companies listed on the JSE. We compare this equally weighted Top 30 Total Return Index, rebalanced each month, to the total returns realised by the SWIX and ALSI. As the chart shows, the Naspers-dominated SWIX outperformed the ALSI and also the equal weighted Index. In the accompanying table the average monthly returns and risks of the alternative benchmarks have been very similar, though the SWIX has produced superior returns since January 2011 with slightly less risk than an equally-weighted Top 30 portfolio.

As we show below, an equally weighted Index may well outperform a market cap weighted index, as was the case between 1995 and 2000 on the JSE when the market as a whole moved mostly sideways.

Sticking closely to the SWIX weights in recent years would have served a portfolio well. However a more consistently diversified portfolio, while it may miss some of the big winners, will also help investors avoid the big potential losers. Furthermore, when the index acting as the benchmark is itself not well diversified, the dangers of following large companies passively when they lose value are much increased. As is often said of active management of portfolios, it is important to avoid the big losers, perhaps even more important than picking the winners. When the tide is running strongly in one direction, riding the wave regardless of risk will seem like a very good idea. When the tide turns, getting off the surf board would be an even better idea. The active investor is naturally conscious of risks that the passive index tracker will not recognize, especially when the index becomes increasingly concentrated, as it may well have become in the case of the SWIX.

1Shareholder Weighted (SWIX) Indices have the same constituents as an existing market capitalisation weighted Index. However, all constituents are weighted in the SWIX indices by applying an alternate free float, called the SWIX free float. The SWIX free float represents the proportion of a constituent’s share capital that is held in dematerialised form and registered on the South African share register, maintained by Strate. The SWIX free float will not exceed the company free float.

Softer tone – stronger rand. A very helpful outcome for the SA economy.

A confident newly appointed Governor adopted a dovish tone. Correctly, but to some degree surprisingly so, with the so-described “normalisation’ of interest rates postponed, perhaps for an extended period of time depending on the data, both local and, as important, foreign developments.

The bond market reacted accordingly, pushing bond prices higher and yields lower. The big surprise to the Reserve Bank was surely the behaviour of the rand: a softer tone with a stronger rand on the day, though surprising, would have been welcomed by the MPC. It improves the outlook for inflation and also the real economy that needs all the help it can get. The risks to inflation are now regarded as balanced rather than to the upside. If inflation continues to trend lower and below the upper band of the inflation target range, the case for lower short rates will present itself. This is particularly the case if the domestic economy continues to operate below potential and the global inflation and interest rate environment remains benign.

It may well remain so despite higher short rates in the US, which presents itself as the only developed economy capable of tolerating such higher interest rates. Weakness in other developed and developing economies will make for a stronger US dollar and simultaneously lower dollar prices for the key metals, minerals and staples traded on global markets. But a weaker rand / US dollar rate may be offset on the crosses and imply much less pressure on the CPI than usual – as has been the case this year.

The reaction in the currency market – less pressure on short rates combined with a stronger rand – helps illustrate an important empirical regularity. The impact of policy determined interest rate movements on the value of the rand is largely unpredictable. It has about an equal chance of going either way. Therefore raising rates may not help reduce inflation outcomes, or reducing them increase the rate of inflation to come. What is predictable is the impact of interest rates on domestic spending. Higher rates slow down spending trends and lower rates help improve them.

On Thursday (the day of the MPC meeting) the lack of pressure on short rates extended to the longer end of the bond market. Perhaps flows of funds from offshore in anticipation of declining long bond yields moved bond prices higher and the rand stronger. We show the reactions in the bond and money market below. It can happen again: less pressure on short term interest rates with the prospect of faster growth in SA can assist the rand and promote faster growth with less inflation. Such possibilities should concentrate the mind of the MPC.