müstahsiliyet

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Türkçe - İngilizce
productivity
the rate at which goods or services are produced by a standard population of workers
the quality of being productive or having the power to produce
Productivity is the rate at which goods are produced. The third-quarter results reflect continued improvements in productivity = output. the rate at which goods are produced, and the amount produced, especially in relation to the work, time, and money needed to produce them increase/improve/raise productivity. In economics, a measure of productive efficiency calculated as the ratio of what is produced to what is required to produce it. Any of the traditional factors of production land, labour, or capital can be used as the denominator of the ratio, though productivity calculations are actually seldom made for land or capital since their capacity is difficult to measure. Labour is in most cases easily quantified for example, by counting workers engaged on a particular product. In industrialized nations, the effects of increasing productivity are most apparent in the use of labour. Productivity can be seen not only as a measure of efficiency but also as an indicator of economic development. Productivity increases as a primitive extractive economy develops into a technologically sophisticated one. The pattern of increase typically exhibits long-term stability interrupted by sudden leaps that represent major technological advances. Productivity in Europe and the U.S. made great strides following the development of such technologies as steam power, the railroad, and the gasoline motor. Later in the 20th century, advances in productivity stemmed from a number of innovations, including assembly lines and automation, computer-integrated manufacturing, database management systems, just-in-time manufacturing, and just-in-time inventory management. Increases in productivity have tended to lead to long-term increases in real wages
productivity is the amount of output produced by a unit of input 9, 43, 584
Savings resulting from a reduction in costs Productivity savings can be realized in any business segment or function of the Company
rate of production; the amount of output per worker-hour; a measure of industrial efficiency and economic development
A measure of technical efficiency, typically expressed as the added output for an additional unit of input or the average output per unit of input, i e , labor, land, capital productivity
The rate of output per unit of input The most common international comparison of productivity is that of labor how much of a product a person can make in a unit of time For example, the labor productivity of farmer might be measured in tons of grain produced per year
The amount of output per unit of input, such as the quantity of a product produced per hour of capital employed
Productivity is used to measure the efficiency of production, and is most often expressed as a ratio of outputs over inputs
The relationship between production of an output and one, some, or all of the resource inputs used in accomplishing the assigned task It is measured as a ratio of output per unit of input over time It is a measure of efficiency and is usually considered as output per person-hour Topic areas: Staff Development and Organizational Capacity, Accountability and Evaluation, Operations Management and Leadership
The rate of output per unit of input
Qualtity of production from a set of inputs Productivity can be increased by improving the quality of the factors of production
weight of dry matter produced in a given period by all the green plants growing in a given space (Daubenmire 1968b)
The output of any production process, per unit of input To increase productivity means to produce more with less In vegetation, productivity is the ability to produce life: to create carbon compounds from atmospheric carbon dioxide through photosynthesis (See net primary production ) In factories and corporations, productivity is a measure of the ability to create goods and services from a given amount of labor, capital, materials, land, resources, knowledge, time, or any combination of those Since capital goods tend to decline in value and wear out, most economists distinguish between gross capital productivity (total yield) and net capital productivity, which dicounts depreciation (Source: Mintzer, 1992)
{i} generativeness, creativeness; fruitfulness, prolificness, state of accomplishing a large amount of work
The rate of production of biomass "Primary productivity" refers to the biomass produced by the photosynthesizing plant components of an ecosystem
(of thought) Thought is said to be productive, since, in a sense, normal cognitive agents are capable of having denumerably many distinct thoughts In other words, to say that thought is productive means that normal cognitive agents have the competence to entertain denumerably many distinct thoughts <Discussion> <References> Ken Aizawa
Productivity is the amount of product created by one unit of a given factor of production over a stated period of time Productivity expresses the marginal relationship of inputs to outputs and measures the economic efficiency of production Productivity indicators ordinarily relate output to a single factor of production, creating measures like labor productivity, capital productivity, and land productivity Measures of multifactor productivity, in contrast, combine productivity indicators for multiple factors of production (labor and capital, for example) to produce a single overall measure of productivity growth
müstahsiliyet