Oklahoma · Economy & Workforce

Labor Productivity in Oklahoma

Real economic output per hour worked, measuring how efficiently the workforce produces goods and services. Values show output relative to the 2017 level (100 = same as 2017).

104.9% in 2025

#49 of 50 · Bottom tier (higher is better)

Oklahoma is worse than the 50-state median (114.2%). That's a gap of 9.3%.

View interactive chart & trend → See full 50-state ranking →

2007 – 2025 · Oklahoma only · interactive chart with US median overlay →

About labor productivity

What this measures: Real economic output per hour worked, indexed to the 2017 level (100 = same as 2017).

Why it matters: Productivity growth is the underlying driver of long-run wage growth and a state's ability to fund services without raising taxes.

Watch out: Productivity is not the same as worker pay. Most US states have seen productivity outrun wages since the 1980s.

Recent trend

YearOklahomaUS median
2016100.4%99.2%
2017100.0%100.0%
201898.8%101.3%
2019101.3%102.6%
2020102.1%107.1%
2021100.9%108.3%
202299.2%107.9%
2023103.7%109.5%
2024105.3%112.5%
2025104.9%114.2%

Oklahoma vs. neighboring states

Same metric (labor productivity), latest year with full state coverage. Click any name for that state's full report.

StateLabor ProductivityNational rank
Kansas 109.5% #39 of 50
Missouri 113.9% #26 of 50
Arkansas 115.4% #22 of 50
Texas 116.4% #17 of 50
New Mexico 132.7% #2 of 50
Colorado 125.5% #5 of 50

How Oklahoma compares (2025)

Top 5 best

#1Washington134.8%
#2New Mexico132.7%
#3California125.9%
#4Maine125.7%
#5Colorado125.5%

Bottom 5

#46Alaska105.7%
#47South Dakota105.1%
#48Pennsylvania105.0%
#49Oklahoma104.9%
#50Wyoming101.9%

Source and methodology

Source: Bureau of Labor Statistics · Direction: higher is better · Unit: % of 2017 level

Download raw CSV (all 50 states, all years)

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