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Virgin Islands productivity

March 23rd, 2024 | Tags: Virgin Islands Dickson Igwe Tortola Productivity
Dickson C. Igwe. Photo: VINO/File
Dickson C. Igwe

This is the first of two articles on capital and productivity. Productivity is the human effort, that when joined with capital mix drives greater prosperity in the Virgin Islands.

OK. The wealth of the Virgin Islands primarily depends on the productivity of its workforce. Productivity is simply the measure of human effort that increases the country’s economic output- every other factor being equal.

Productivity is the key measure driving up the value of the Virgin Islands capital mix. A productive economy possesses a capital mix that achieves optimum outcomes from its inputs of human effort, for example, customer service, skills and learning, ethics, innovation, and so on. Learning and culture are critical to economic productivity

The efforts of Virgin Islands entrepreneurs, managers, and the country’s workforce, skilled and unskilled, is what drives up or down the value of the capital mix.  Without the human factor, capital is redundant. Human effort is the most critical factor in the productivity of an economy. Ironically, productivity is not easily measured.

The increase in GDP from one year to the next is probably the most appropriate and easily available measure of economic productivity.

Productivity is the human effort that drives the best return from the country’s capital mix, its wealth-generating assets of land, labor, enterprise, technology, and machinery. Productivity increases the value of the goods and services produced by a country. Human effort in the economy is the invisible hand that drives the economic engine. 

Now, value and supply chains drive the Virgin Islands' economy. The value cum supply chain is the combination of the capital mix especially land, technology and machinery linked together with the human factors in specific markets that increase in value at each subsequent stage.

The value supply chain increases the value of a specific market at every stage of the trading process from inception until it reaches the consumer. The value supply chain drives the economy to the desired outcome. However, it is human effort that is crucial to the movement of the value supply chain.

The chain drives the Virgin Islands' economy to one outcome or the other. Productivity- human effort- determines the scope, reach, and value of the chain. Policymakers must take both value supply chain and productivity into account when deciding on both public and private investment. 

Productivity or human effort applied to capital is the key to increasing Virgin Islands' prosperity.

OK. Do these Virgin Islands know the scope and value of the capital assets sitting in the country? Is there a list of wealth-generating assets also known as capital assets? How much of that wealth is in public hands or government? How much is in the private sector? What capital assets do alien interests own? Is the best use being made of those assets in terms of employment, management opportunities, and profit share for natives? Are the Virgin Islands' value supply chains identifiable?

Can the country’s wealth-generating assets be accurately valued?  Which sector of the economy- for example, tourism, financial services, agriculture and internal market has the potential to increase in value, offering greater revenues and greater national prosperity?

One measure of the country’s wealth-generating assets is the increase in revenues earned from various sectors of the economy. A sector or market is composed of value supply chains. GDP is another useful economic measure that measures all the products of the various sectors of the economy. However, does GDP accurately place value on a country’s wealth generating assets?

GDP is not necessarily a good measure of productivity, as GDP fails to measure sufficiently the intangible resources that drive wealth such as culture, learning and human effort.

Productivity is more than rent or revenue earned from this or that economic sector of the Virgin Islands. Productivity is the effort that drives up or down the country’s GDP. Productivity is action focused on achieving specific economic outcomes.

Capital and value chains drive Virgin Islands' prosperity, and productivity is that intangible factor that decides increase in the value of the country’s capital assets and direction of its value chains. Productivity is the human effort, strategy and vision that derives the best outcomes from those value chains. Productivity is the human effort that drives tourism, financial services and internal markets.

Then in a tourism-oriented economy, customer service is the major component in driving up productivity in the sector. Customer service adds value to the capital mix and value chain that drives tourism and that is in addition to the skills that are required to service the travel industry such as hotel management, culinary, maritime, and more.  The better the quality of Virgin Islands customer service the greater the output from tourism and travel. Productivity is King.

Dickson Igwe

7 Responses to “Virgin Islands productivity”

  • workers (23/03/2024, 16:54) Like (0) Dislike (0) Reply
    We need a minimum wage increase
  • @ WORKERS (24/03/2024, 13:58) Like (0) Dislike (0) Reply
    YOU WILL HAVE MAKE AN APPOINTMENT WITH THE ( BIG youth )
  • yo momma (24/03/2024, 14:39) Like (1) Dislike (0) Reply
    Another good read , positive and enlightening ???? //\_ @workers ) you will have to check out the BIG youth , he is our new Coach , since the first one went on vacation permanently
  • Bush Professor (24/03/2024, 21:07) Like (2) Dislike (0) Reply
    A prudent productivity target is 72% . However, the average productivity across all professions is 60%. Low productivity cost and requires additional time, resources, etc to produce a unit of good and services. Low productivity is strain on national productivity, making countries, businesses, institutions, agencies less competitive, etc.
    • Mustang (25/03/2024, 13:41) Like (1) Dislike (0) Reply
      To Bush Professor, I wonder what the productivity rate is on average for the Public sector? I will take a WAG at 30-40% and that may be quite generous. In an 8-hour day, public sector employees on average probably provide may be 4-5 hours of work. Government can operate more efficiently and effectively and deliver more and better services at a lower cost if it were to improve its productivity rate.


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