National Productivity and Performance Management
Synopsis
This chapter explores the relationship between national productivity and human resource performance management from the perspectives of macroeconomics and strategic management. Using the Cobb-Douglas production function as a theoretical foundation, the chapter analyzes how physical capital (K), labor (L), and total factor productivity (TFP) contribute to Indonesia's aggregate output. Empirical analysis reveals that human capital contribution has been negative since 2005 ( −0.5% during the 2015–2019 period), TFP has stagnated since 2010 (declining from 2.5% to 1.2%), and labor productivity recorded negative growth of 1.55% in 2024. Employing Porter's Diamond Model, this chapter identifies structural weaknesses in the competitiveness of Indonesia's manufacturing sector, particularly in the intensity of domestic competition (2.5/5.0) and related and supporting industries (2.0/5.0). To bridge the gap between macroeconomic analysis and micro-level practice, the chapter presents a cascading Key Performance Indicator (KPI) framework that links national productivity targets to individual employee performance. Analysis using the Mincer equation shows that returns to education in Indonesia average 8.7% per additional year of schooling, with higher education yielding the highest returns (11.2% to 12.8%). Furthermore, a training ROI calculator framework demonstrates that systematic investment (e.g., Lean Manufacturing Training costing IDR 285,000,000) can generate a return on investment (ROI) of up to 146% within one year. This chapter offers a theoretical contribution by integrating Solow's growth theory, Mincer's human capital theory, and Porter's Diamond Model into a comprehensive performance management framework, as well as a practical contribution by providing an actionable toolkit for HR managers to enhance organizational productivity amidst structural challenges.