Annual Report 2007-08
Annual report series
The Annual Report 2007-08 was tabled in Parliament on 31 October 2008 and forms part of the Commission's annual report series.
Download the report
- Contents
- Media release
- Preliminaries (PDF - 340 Kb)
Cover, Copyright, Letter, Acknowledgments, Contents, Abbreviations
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Theme chapter
1 Enhancing Australia's productivity growth (PDF - 113 Kb)Why is productivity growth important?
What has happened to Australia's productivity growth and why?
The outlook for productivity growth
What policies will facilitate productivity growth? - 2 Review of Commission activities and performance (PDF - 104 Kb)
Overview
Year in review
Transparency and public consultation
Feedback on the Commission's work
Policy and wider impacts
Associated reporting - Appendix A - Management and accountability (PDF - 198 Kb)
- Appendix B - Program performance (PDF - 257 Kb)
- Appendix C - Government commissioned projects (PDF - 81 Kb)
- Appendix D - Competitive neutrality complaints (PDF - 17 Kb)
- Appendix E - Supporting research and related activities (PDF - 82 Kb)
- Appendix F - Publications (PDF - 26 Kb)
- Appendix G - Financial statements (PDF - 217 Kb)
- References (PDF - 42 Kb)
- Index (PDF - 24 Kb)
The Productivity Challenge and Innovation
Australia's productivity growth has slowed in the current decade. While much of this is not policy-related there is a pressing need to do better, according to the Productivity Commission in its Annual Report, released today.
Productivity Commission Chairman, Gary Banks said: 'The challenges confronting Australia lend urgency to policy efforts to raise national productivity, and pursuing the right approach to innovation is key to achieving this.'
The Commission's annual report examines the pattern of productivity growth over the last thirty years, the future outlook and the scope to improve productivity by stimulating innovation.
The Commission found that, following a surge in productivity over the 1990s, growth has slowed to below the long-term average. The slowdown cannot be fully explained, but is in large part due to the combined effects of the mining export boom and drought. Compared with the 1990s, more effort in enterprises also seems to have gone into expanding production through investment and new hiring, rather than cost cutting.
Productivity growth arises from many small, everyday improvements within organisations to improve the quality of products, service customers better, and reduce costs. This often involves adopting and adapting technologies developed elsewhere, as well as investing in research and development.
The Commission points to three policy 'planks' for driving innovation - incentives, flexibility and capabilities. It emphasises the role of competition in stimulating innovation, combined with a regulatory environment that facilitates change within enterprises.
Gary Banks observed: 'International evidence suggests that it is market competition, rather than government assistance, that is the main driver of innovation and its diffusion throughout an economy.'
The Commission noted that governments can make important contributions through ensuring healthy competition, workplace flexibility and careful investments in platform capabilities, such as human capital and infrastructure.
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