A stubborn, invisible drag on economic growth, the gap between hours worked and value created, is costing developing economies far more than any tariff or debt burden. Jamaica offers a case study the world cannot afford to ignore.
Begin with a simple equation. Take what a nation produces. Divide it by what went in, the hours worked, the capital deployed, the human energy expended. The answer is productivity, and it is, according to an expanding body of economic research, the single most consequential variable in determining whether a country grows rich or stays poor. It is also, in much of the developing world, quietly, systematically broken.
The World Bank and the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development have found, repeatedly, that well over 60 to 70 percent of income disparities between countries are explained not by how much people work, but by how efficiently that work converts into output. Nations are not wealthy because their citizens log more hours. They are wealthy because each hour produces dramatically more value.
For Jamaica, a small open economy of roughly 2.8 million people that has posted decades of sluggish growth despite a well-educated workforce, a strategically located port, and a globally recognized diaspora, the productivity deficit is not a minor inefficiency. It is, economists argue, the structural ceiling on national ambition.
The Anatomy of a Lost Hour
Productivity, at its most granular, is experienced as time, specifically, the proportion of a working day that generates meaningful output versus the proportion absorbed by friction. Infrastructure failures, coordination delays, inadequate transport systems, energy interruptions, and management deficits each extract a toll that rarely appears in a company’s income statement but accumulates relentlessly across an economy.
A further and often underexamined constraint on Jamaica’s productivity is the country’s persistently low levels of formal skills training, certification, and workforce development. Productivity is not driven by effort alone; it is heavily influenced by human capital quality and the ability of workers to operate efficiently within increasingly technical and globally competitive industries.
Prime Minister Andrew Holness, in his recent Budget Debate presentation, cited International Labour Organization data showing that Jamaica produces approximately US$8.81 of output per hour worked, compared to a Caribbean average of roughly US$20.50, while economies such as Panama exceed US$40 per hour worked. The productivity gap is not merely a labour issue; it is a skills and structural issue. It was recently highlighted that nearly seven in 10 Jamaican workers are not formally trained for the jobs they perform, while fewer than three in 10 are enrolled in tertiary education or skills-training programmes.
In a brief exchange, Economist Keenan Falconer added that this creates a serious constraint on Jamaica’s ability to absorb higher-value foreign direct investment and transition into more advanced, technology-enabled industries. Investors seeking to establish high-productivity operations naturally favour markets with deeper pools of certified and technically competent labour. Consequently, even if Jamaica improves crime reduction, governance, and the broader business environment, long-term growth will remain constrained unless equal emphasis is placed on education reform, technical certification, workforce development, and human capital formation. In modern economies, skills are not merely social assets; they are productivity infrastructure.
Compounding this analysis into economic terms illustrates the scale of the issue more clearly. Using an illustrative estimate derived from Jamaica’s GDP per worker divided by total annual labour hours, the implied average value of productive output is in the range of approximately JMD $1,000 to $1,500 per hour across the economy. This is not a wage measure, but an output proxy used to translate labour time into economic value.
A conservative valuation of labour productivity in Jamaica, using a blended estimate of JMD $1,200 per productive hour across formal and semi-formal sectors, suggests that the 10,560 hours of lost productive capacity per worker over a decade translates into approximately JMD $12.7 million in foregone economic output per individual.
When scaled across a workforce of 500,000 workers, the result is approximately 5.28 billion lost hours, representing in the order of JMD $6.3 trillion in potential economic output over ten years.
Conversely, even a modest improvement in productivity efficiency, from 40 per cent to 60 per cent utilisation, would recover roughly 1.76 billion hours of productive capacity, unlocking an estimated JMD $2.1 trillion in additional economic output over the same period. These figures are not intended to imply precision at the micro level, but rather to illustrate the macroeconomic reality: small inefficiencies in daily labour, when compounded across time and population scale, translate into multi-trillion-dollar differences in national output, wage capacity, and fiscal space.
Why It Matters More Than Debt
Development economists have long catalogued the obstacles facing small Caribbean economies: sovereign debt burdens, vulnerability to climate shocks, dependence on tourism revenues that evaporate in a pandemic. These are real. But they are, in a meaningful sense, legible. Productivity loss is not. It does not appear on a balance sheet. It is not reported in quarterly GDP figures with sufficient granularity to trigger alarm. It simply accumulates, invisibly, in the gap between what an economy could produce and what it does.
The relationship between productivity and cost of living adds a further dimension that policymakers rarely frame with sufficient directness. Where productivity is low, unit production costs rise; businesses pass those costs to consumers; wage growth is constrained by thin margins; and prices accelerate faster than income. The result is a structural squeeze on household living standards that no fiscal transfer program can sustainably offset.
The Singapore Comparison
Analysts point frequently to Singapore as a counterexample, a small, resource-constrained economy that achieved productivity levels multiple times higher than regional peers through sustained commitment to governance discipline, systems efficiency, infrastructure reliability, and human capital development. The comparison is sometimes dismissed as inapplicable: Singapore’s geography, its city-state governance model, and its particular history are not easily exported.
But the underlying mechanism is exportable. Productivity is not a gift bestowed by geography. It is a policy choice, embedded in institutions, infrastructure investment, and management culture.
Even modest improvements, estimated in some models at 20 to 30 percent over a sustained period, would produce measurable macroeconomic effects: higher GDP without proportional increases in labor input; improved wage capacity; greater fiscal space without tax increases; faster delivery of infrastructure and housing; and improved competitiveness in export and service sectors.
A Ceiling, Not a Floor
Jamaica’s economic challenge, viewed through this lens, is not a failure of effort. Surveys of labour attitudes consistently find high levels of aspiration. The constraint is conversion efficiency, the systemic capacity to transform effort into output.
Until productivity is treated as a central economic priority, not an operational footnote, but a development constraint deserving the same analytical seriousness as debt management or foreign investment policy, growth will continue to press against a ceiling that is structural, not cyclical. Nations do not become poorer because their people stop working. They become poorer because too much work does not translate into enough value. The equation is simple. Solving it is not.
Kemal Brown is a Jamaican serial entrepreneur, strategist, and advocate for sustainable national development through innovation, leadership, and social transformation. His work and commentary often explore the intersection of business, culture, technology, and human development, with a particular focus on the values and systems necessary for long-term progress in Jamaica and the wider Caribbean.
