By 1946, 8,000 workers were producing 1,000 vehicles a month.
But one result is that the average worker now produces about 6 percent more an hour than at the beginning of the decade.
Last year the 8,500 workers in body and assembly produced just under 200,000 cars.
A rising productivity rate has meant that workers have produced more each hour on the job.
Fewer workers can produce all that is necessary for society's requirements.
Using the new tools, workers are producing more in each hour on the job.
The same four workers produce 90 more doors every hour than they used to, roughly a 15 percent improvement.
On these lines, workers assemble or produce just one part of the whole product.
The mill's 350 workers produce enough paper in a year to make 450 billion cigarettes.
Its 60 workers produced more than 84,000 bricks per day.