Finance and economics | Free exchange

Are digital distractions harming labour productivity?

The evidence is mixed; it seems clear, however, that they are making us unhappier

FOR many it is a reflex as unconscious as breathing. Hit a stumbling-block during an important task (like, say, writing a column)? The hand reaches for the phone and opens the social network of choice. A blur of time passes, and half an hour or more of what ought to have been productive effort is gone. A feeling of regret is quickly displaced by the urge to see what has happened on Twitter in the past 15 seconds. Some time after the deadline, the editor asks when exactly to expect the promised copy. Distraction is a constant these days; supplying it is the business model of some of the world’s most powerful firms. As economists search for explanations for sagging productivity, some are asking whether the inability to focus for longer than a minute is to blame.

This article appeared in the Finance & economics section of the print edition under the headline "Paying no mind"

The choice that could save South Africa, or wreck it

From the December 7th 2017 edition

Discover stories from this section and more in the list of contents

Explore the edition

More from Finance and economics

Working from home and the US-Europe divide

Americans are no longer the rich world’s great office drones

Immigration is surging, with big economic consequences

The West faces an unprecedented number of new arrivals


Japan will struggle to rescue its plummeting currency

Expensive government intervention looks likely to provide only brief respite