You are mistaken.Less working hours means less productivity no matter how you like to argue it.
You are mistaken.Less working hours means less productivity no matter how you like to argue it.
You are mistaken.Less working hours means less productivity no matter how you like to argue it.
For example, if you are manufacturing planks out of tree-trunks using a handsaw, you might be lucky to produce one plank per day.
If I was equipped with a large mechanical saw and travelling bed, I might produce two thousand planks a day.
"ooohhhh missing apostrophe, you must of went over that post with a magnifying glass. I wasnt being grammar police."
Would you believe Im a qualified English teacher certified by a London school working abroad?
that doesn't make sense. What do you mean?By your analogy the British worker is capable of sawing more timber with the exact same saw.
that doesn't make sense. What do you mean?By your analogy the British worker is capable of sawing more timber with the exact same saw.
Productivity is a measure of how many products you can make in a day for a given sum of money. Nothing more .
You seem be having difficult understanding that simple concept.
Just ask the chinese if you want an explanation.![]()
Longer hours means more productivity. For example I worked 12 hours yesterday on my own erecting 30m of German made peri shuttering and pouring a concrete wall 30m long x 2.4m tall. No small feat I can tell you.
If I had only worked 8 hours I would only have acheived 20m.
Lithuanians will work the 12 hours for less money than a British worker.
Can you answer the following question... (he won't)
Which worker is the most productive, the EE or the British worker?
No.Productivity is a measure of how many products you can make in a day for a given sum of money. Nothing more .