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Adam J. Fein: Where productivity is growing in wholesale distribution

August 2006

Wholesale distribution contributed more than 25 percent of the U.S. economy’s total productivity gains over the past 15 years. Surprisingly, only four sub-sectors of the wholesale industry supplied most of the growth since 2001. Ongoing technology investments by distributors bode well for future productivity gains throughout the industry.

By Adam J. Fein, Ph.D.


Productivity is fundamental to economic growth. The U.S. economy has been able to produce more goods and services over time by making production and distribution more efficient, not simply by adding more labor time. Output per hour, the most commonly cited labor productivity statistic, captures the combined effect of changes in technology, capital per worker, level of output, capacity utilization, managerial skill, and many other factors. 

Productivity is also crucial to profitability in wholesale distribution because employee compensation costs—salaries, commissions and benefits—represent 60 to 70 percent of total operating expenses. As I note in an earlier column, distributors are at the forefront of using technology to reduce repetitive, low value-added activities such as order processing, billing, inventory control, delivery route scheduling and warehouse management.   (See The productivity imperative for wholesale distribution

The table below compares “output per hour” in wholesale with the non-farm business sector, which includes all for-profit business sectors in the U.S. economy. Productivity growth throughout the economy began accelerating in the mid-1990s. Yet productivity growth in wholesale exceeded the overall business sector by 1.6 percentage points in the past fifteen years and by 2.5 percentage points since 2001. Note that output is adjusted for price changes, eliminating the effect of product inflation. 

AVERAGE ANNUAL GROWTH IN LABOR PRODUCTIVITY, 1991-2005

  1991-1995 1996-2000 2001-2005 1991-2005
Non-farm business sector  1.5%  2.5%  3.3%  2.5%
Wholesale trade  3.0%  5.1%  5.8%  4.1%

 

Other studies of labor productivity, using different metrics, also show that the wholesale industry has made a disproportionately large contribution to the nation’s productivity. McKinsey Global Institute concluded that the wholesale sector contributed 28 percent of the productivity increase from 1995 to 1999. A study by economists at the Department of Commerce found that wholesale trade contributed a similar proportion of the nation’s productivity growth over the longer period from 1989 to 2001. To put these results in perspective, the wholesale industry accounted for only six percent of U.S. gross domestic product during the periods studied.

Unfortunately, these studies do not identify which sub-sectors of the wholesale industry contributed to productivity growth. Therefore, we mathematically decomposed productivity growth into the exact percentage point contributions of 19 major sub-sectors within wholesale distribution during the 2001 to 2005 period. This process, called growth accounting, allows us to identify how much of the 5.8 percent growth in labor productivity came from each sub-sector.

The results of our analyses are shown below. Four sub-sectors accounted for nearly 70 percent of the 5.8 percent growth in labor productivity from 2001 to 2005. These four sub-sectors accounted for only 43 percent of the wholesale industry’s sales during this period.

CONTRIBUTION TO TOTAL PRODUCTIVITY GROWTH
IN WHOLESALE, 2001-2005

Sub-sector (by major product type)

Contribution

% of total growth 

Computer hardware and software

 1.61%

27.8% 

Motor vehicles and motor vehicle parts

 0.84%

14.5% 

Electrical products and electronics

 0.78%

13.6% 

Pharmaceuticals

 0.74%

12.8% 

Industrial products

 0.48%

8.3% 

Commercial equipment and supplies

 0.42%

7.3% 

Office products and paper

 0.21%

3.6% 

Apparel and piece goods

 0.16%

 2.8%

Other consumer products

 0.15%

 2.6%

Miscellaneous durable goods

 0.11%

 2.0%

Metals

 0.10%

 1.8%

Furniture and home furnishings

 0.09%

 1.6%

Building materials

 0.08%

 1.4%

Oil and gas products

 0.03%

 0.5%

Agricultural products

 0.01%

 0.2%

Chemicals and plastics

 0.00%

 0.0%

Hardware, plumbing and heating equipment and supplies

 -0.01%

 -0.1%

Beer, wine and liquor

 -0.01%

 -0.2%

Grocery and foodservice

 -0.03%

 -0.5%

Average Annual Growth in Wholesale Trade, 2001-2005

 5.8%

 100.0%

 

Data limitations prevent us from peering below this admittedly aggregated view of the industry. However, the sub-sectors making the largest contribution to productivity growth have some common characteristics:

Note that total industry size did not guarantee a meaningful contribution to productivity improvement. Grocery and food wholesaling, which represented 11 percent of total revenues, actually had a slightly negative contribution to the wholesale industry’s productivity growth. Although these wholesalers are information technology intensive, they face shrinking capacity utilization as larger retailers bypass the traditional channel.  Wal-Mart’s leading share and the growth of large supermarkets are triggering an intense shakeout among the remaining smaller stores that used to purchase through wholesale distribution. Real (inflation-adjusted) revenues of grocery wholesalers have been essentially flat since 2001.

Nevertheless, the factors driving productivity growth in the top industries are likely to continue. These productivity gains will probably spread to other sectors as distributors continue making investments in information technology.

About the author

Adam J. Fein, Ph.D., Pembroke Consulting

Adam J. Fein, Ph.D. is the founder and president of Pembroke Consulting, a firm that provides business and marketing strategy advice to executives operating in channel-intensive industries. He can be reached at (215) 523-5700 or on the web at www.PembrokeConsulting.com.



© 2006 Pembroke Consulting, Inc.

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