Determinants of coal mine labor productivity change. [1950 to 1977]
Coal mine labor productivity (tons per miner-shift) has been falling yearly since 1970. The decline in labor productivity since 1970 has implications for the coal industry's labor demand, cost of production, and injuries and could hinder the ability of the industry to meet the coal output goals of the National Energy Plan. The purpose of this research study was to identify and measure the causes of labor productivity decline. Concise answers are given to three questions: Why is coal mine labor productivity important. What are the causes of labor productivity decline in deep and surface coal mines. What are the implications of these findings for future coal mine labor productivity. Coal mine labor productivity is important for three reasons: (1) it affects the cost of coal production, (2) it affects coal industry labor demand, and (3) it affects injuries and injury rates in coal mining. Labor productivity is the link between output levels and employment requirements. The period of declining productivity coincides with major changes in the coal industry's environment: (1) change from a largely unregulated industry to a highly regulated industry (the Coal Mine Health and Safety Act of 1969; implementation of many state surface mine reclamation laws, etc.) and (2) change from a declining, marginal profits industry to a growing, profitable industry (increasing coal prices and demand in the 1970s). A major conclusion of the study is that a portion of the high labor productivity of the 1960s was possible because some of the costs of coal mining - worker injuries, black lung disability, and environmental damage - were not being paid for by the coal industry and coal consumers. Once these costs were forced internally on the mine operators by legislation, productivity fell and the cost of production increased.
- Research Organization:
- Oak Ridge Associated Universities, Inc., TN (USA)
- Sponsoring Organization:
- USDOE Office of Fossil Energy (FE)
- DOE Contract Number:
- EY-76-C-05-0033
- OSTI ID:
- 5721116
- Report Number(s):
- DOE/IR--0056
- Country of Publication:
- United States
- Language:
- English
Similar Records
Coal mine labor productivity: review of issues and evidence
Preliminary analysis of the probable causes of decreased coal mining productivity (1969 to 1976). [1950 to 1976]
Coal mine labor productivity: the problem, policy implications, and literature review. [Increase 1950-69; decline 1969-75; regional variations]
Technical Report
·
Tue May 01 00:00:00 EDT 1979
·
OSTI ID:5721068
Preliminary analysis of the probable causes of decreased coal mining productivity (1969 to 1976). [1950 to 1976]
Technical Report
·
Sun Nov 06 23:00:00 EST 1977
·
OSTI ID:5443070
Coal mine labor productivity: the problem, policy implications, and literature review. [Increase 1950-69; decline 1969-75; regional variations]
Technical Report
·
Fri Mar 31 23:00:00 EST 1978
·
OSTI ID:6888718
Related Subjects
01 COAL, LIGNITE, AND PEAT
012000* -- Coal
Lignite
& Peat-- Mining
29 ENERGY PLANNING, POLICY, AND ECONOMY
294001 -- Energy Planning & Policy-- Coal
ACCIDENTS
CARBONACEOUS MATERIALS
COAL
COAL INDUSTRY
COAL MINERS
COAL MINING
EDUCATION
ENERGY POLICY
ENERGY SOURCES
FOSSIL FUELS
FUELS
GOVERNMENT POLICIES
INDUSTRY
LEGISLATION
MANPOWER
MINERS
MINING
NATIONAL ENERGY PLAN
NORTH AMERICA
PERSONNEL
PRICES
PRODUCTIVITY
SURFACE MINING
UNDERGROUND MINING
USA
012000* -- Coal
Lignite
& Peat-- Mining
29 ENERGY PLANNING, POLICY, AND ECONOMY
294001 -- Energy Planning & Policy-- Coal
ACCIDENTS
CARBONACEOUS MATERIALS
COAL
COAL INDUSTRY
COAL MINERS
COAL MINING
EDUCATION
ENERGY POLICY
ENERGY SOURCES
FOSSIL FUELS
FUELS
GOVERNMENT POLICIES
INDUSTRY
LEGISLATION
MANPOWER
MINERS
MINING
NATIONAL ENERGY PLAN
NORTH AMERICA
PERSONNEL
PRICES
PRODUCTIVITY
SURFACE MINING
UNDERGROUND MINING
USA