Nicholas Bloom on Management, Productivity, and Scientific Progress | Podcast Summary

Nicholas Bloom on Management, Productivity, & Scientific Progress | Conversations with Tyler In a conversation with Tyler, Stanford professor Nicholas Bloom discusses the intricacies of management practices, productivity techniques, and the influence of…

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Historical Perspective on Productivity Growth

Productivity growth began to accelerate after the Industrial Revolution, peaking in the 1950s at 3-4% a year.

Since then, productivity growth has been falling, a trend that has been partially offset by increased investment in research.

It’s harder and harder to find ideas. We’re putting more inputs into labs but actually productivity growth is falling. – Nick Bloom

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  1. 01Nicholas Bloom on Management, Productivity, & Scientific Progress | Conversations with Tyler
  2. 02Historical Perspective on Productivity Growth
  3. 03Stable Wages of Scientists
  4. 04Shift from Public to Private Goods
  5. 05Universities’ Role in R&D
  6. 06American Firms’ Competitive Advantage
  7. 07IT’s Impact on Productivity
  8. 08Government’s Role in Funding R&D
  9. 09Value of Management Consultants

Showing Historical Perspective on Productivity Growth, idea 2 of 9.