What is collection turnover?
Collection turnover is a very eloquent indicator, as it shows how long the Judiciary would need to "close" to zero its current collection.
Of all the indicators of judicial productivity, perhaps the turnover of the collection is the most eloquent. He reveals how long a court would need to "close" to judge the collection currently pending.
According to Justice in Numbers , the TJSP is the state court with the longest turnover time, requiring 4 years and 5 months without distribution to judge its collection. The other large courts are in the national average, requiring around 3 years to reach the same position. This is also the average turnover time of the Federal Justice's collection.

The higher courts, on the other hand, would need 1 year of 3 months, on average, to zero their collection. Well, it is an indicator that speaks for itself and gives us a real dimension that we have years of delay to placate.