Unit labour costs for OECD area rose by 0.3% in the second quarter of 2012
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20/09/2012 - Unit labour costs (ULCs) in the OECD area rose by 0.3% in the second quarter of 2012, driven by continued increases in labour compensation per unit of labour input.
In the United States, ULCs increased by 0.4% in the second quarter of 2012 (down from 1.2% in the previous quarter), with increases in labour productivity (0.2%) more than offset by increases in labour compensation per unit of labour input (0.7%). In the euro area, ULCs rose by 0.4% in the second quarter of 2012 (0.3% in the first quarter), with labour compensation per unit of labour input rising by 0.2% coupled with falling labour productivity by 0.2%. In the United Kingdom, strong increases in labour compensation and negative labour productivity growth continued to drive up ULCs.
Since the beginning of the financial crisis, unit labour costs (ULC) in the euro area have risen by about 9%, 3 percentage points higher than the OECD average. Rebalancing between euro area countries has in most cases been on the way since the beginning of 2009, however. In Ireland, Spain and Portugal, ULCs have continued to fall or remain moderate, mainly driven by labour productivity growth as a result of significant cuts in employment. In contrast, ULCs increased in Germany, France, Finland and Austria, driven by increased labour compensation and largely unchanged labour productivity growth.
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Unit Labour Costs (ULC) in selected OECD countries1 Seasonally adjusted, total economy
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ULC and its components2 Total change 2007Q4 to 2012Q2, in percent
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ULC over time within the Euro area Index, 2005Q1=100
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1. 2012Q2. based on early estimates of quarterly unit labour costs, 2012Q1 for Ireland and Portugal 2. The growth rate of unit labour cost is approximately equal to the difference between the growth rate of labour compensation per unit of labour input and labour productivity growth
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Source: OECD Early Estimates of Quarterly ULC Indicators – Total economy
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