"[ These] papers explore the productivity measurement debate, considering problems facing price measurement and recommendations to statistical agencies about improvements and research that could be implemented and pursued." * Journal of Economic Literature * "This work is yet another outstanding contribution from the University of Chicago Press to summarizing and synthesizing the state of knowledge about a specific economic subject. Editors Reinsdorf and Sheiner have assembled an impressive set of contributors...It would make excellent supplemental reading in graduate macroeconomics or economic statistics courses." * Choice * "This is an important book about an immensely important topicproductivity measurement. The editorial and author team, comprising some of our strongest experts on the subject, have compiled a collection of chapters that is both eclectic and timely." * International Productivity Monitor * Productivity growth is central to improvements in the well-being of a society. In recent years, there have been significant questions about the accuracy of our productivity measures. Sheiner, Reinsdorf, and their collaborators tackle those questions, laying out how the statistical agencies measure productivity, identifying where the problems with the measures lie andimportantlysuggesting possible steps towards improving them. -- Katharine G. Abraham | University of Maryland Measuring productivity does not catch the eye of headline writers, which is lamentable since productivity is a vital issue. Reinsdorf, Sheiner, and the all-star team theyve assembled are to be congratulated on a book that lays out not only the shortcomings in the statistical system, but also its strengths and the obstacles that make improvements so difficult to achieve. This book will, I hope, inspire actions to fix some of the potholes in our current measurement methods. -- Martin Neil Baily | Brookings Institution