cover image: At Your Service : The Promise of Services-Led Development (Vol. 2) : Overview (English)

20.500.12592/hn42b7

At Your Service : The Promise of Services-Led Development (Vol. 2) : Overview (English)

16 Sep 2021

Throughout history, industrialization has been synonymous with development. However, the trend of premature deindustrialization and the spread of automation technologies associated with Industry 4.0 has raised concerns that the development model based on export-led manufacturing seen in East Asia will be harder for hitherto less industrialized countries to replicate in the future. Can services-led development be an alternative? Contrary to conventional wisdom, the features of manufacturing that were considered uniquely conducive for productivity growth - such as international trade, scale economies, inter-sectoral linkages, and innovation - are increasingly shared by the services sector. But services are not monolithic. The twin gains of productivity growth and large-scale job creation for relatively low-skilled workers are less likely to come together in any given services subsector. The promise of services-led development in the future will be strengthened to the extent that technological change reduces the trade-off between productivity and jobs, and growth opportunities in services with potential for high productivity do not depend on a manufacturing base. Considering technological change and linkages between sectors while differentiating across types of services, this book assesses the scope of a services-driven development model and policy directions that maximize its potential.
information and communication technology digital technology industrialized countries economies of scale job creation retail trade export of goods labor productivity growth per capita income value added informal economy manufacturing sector food services firm size capital intensity gross national income total employment international labour organization export-led growth machinery and equipment agriculture and service low-skilled worker privileges and immunity learning and innovation credit movement of people other sectors country income group average number of employees movement of labor share of employment agriculture and industry in economics quality and efficiency higher-income countries massachusetts institute of technology paucity of data capital per worker capital stock per worker scale of production scale production industrialized country competitiveness and private sector development characteristics of services gender and jobs investment in software restaurant business

Authors

Nayyar,Gaurav, Hallward-Driemeier,Mary C., Davies,Elwyn Adriaan Robin

Disclosure Date
2021/09/16
Disclosure Status
Disclosed
Doc Name
Overview
Published in
United States of America
Total Volume(s)
3 (See all volumes)
Unit Owning
EFI-FCI-TIC-Firms,Entrep,&Innov. (ETIFE)
Version Type
Final
Volume No
2

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