The Service Sector: Productivity and Growth: Proceedings of the International Conference held in Rome, Italy, May 27-28 1993
The economics of the service sector has recently attracted a large attention. At a macroeconomic level, the discussion has been focused on the issues concerning the relationship between the expansion of the service industry and the potential for a stable and sustained growth. Slow productivity growth, due to the largely non tradable nature of the output, lack of competition due either to regulations or to barriers to entry are among the "bads" sometimes associated with a "service led" growth. On the other hand new working places are created in the service industries at a rate much higher than in the industrial ones. Is a lower rate of technological change and the continuing of inflationary tensions the price to pay for a sustained expansion of employment in the service sector? These are in a nutshell the questions that led CElS (Centre for International Studies on Economic Growth - University of Rome "Tor Vergata") to organize the International Seminar on "The Service Sector: Productivity and Growth" held in Rome in May 1993, whose revised proceedings are published in this volume. The economists and academicians invited to the conference have faced the issues mentioned above from different perspectives, but they concentrated especially on the problems relative to growth and productivity.
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The Service Sector: Productivity and Growth: Proceedings of the International Conference held in Rome, Italy, May 27-28 1993
The economics of the service sector has recently attracted a large attention. At a macroeconomic level, the discussion has been focused on the issues concerning the relationship between the expansion of the service industry and the potential for a stable and sustained growth. Slow productivity growth, due to the largely non tradable nature of the output, lack of competition due either to regulations or to barriers to entry are among the "bads" sometimes associated with a "service led" growth. On the other hand new working places are created in the service industries at a rate much higher than in the industrial ones. Is a lower rate of technological change and the continuing of inflationary tensions the price to pay for a sustained expansion of employment in the service sector? These are in a nutshell the questions that led CElS (Centre for International Studies on Economic Growth - University of Rome "Tor Vergata") to organize the International Seminar on "The Service Sector: Productivity and Growth" held in Rome in May 1993, whose revised proceedings are published in this volume. The economists and academicians invited to the conference have faced the issues mentioned above from different perspectives, but they concentrated especially on the problems relative to growth and productivity.
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The Service Sector: Productivity and Growth: Proceedings of the International Conference held in Rome, Italy, May 27-28 1993

The Service Sector: Productivity and Growth: Proceedings of the International Conference held in Rome, Italy, May 27-28 1993

The Service Sector: Productivity and Growth: Proceedings of the International Conference held in Rome, Italy, May 27-28 1993

The Service Sector: Productivity and Growth: Proceedings of the International Conference held in Rome, Italy, May 27-28 1993

Paperback(Softcover reprint of the original 1st ed. 1995)

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Overview

The economics of the service sector has recently attracted a large attention. At a macroeconomic level, the discussion has been focused on the issues concerning the relationship between the expansion of the service industry and the potential for a stable and sustained growth. Slow productivity growth, due to the largely non tradable nature of the output, lack of competition due either to regulations or to barriers to entry are among the "bads" sometimes associated with a "service led" growth. On the other hand new working places are created in the service industries at a rate much higher than in the industrial ones. Is a lower rate of technological change and the continuing of inflationary tensions the price to pay for a sustained expansion of employment in the service sector? These are in a nutshell the questions that led CElS (Centre for International Studies on Economic Growth - University of Rome "Tor Vergata") to organize the International Seminar on "The Service Sector: Productivity and Growth" held in Rome in May 1993, whose revised proceedings are published in this volume. The economists and academicians invited to the conference have faced the issues mentioned above from different perspectives, but they concentrated especially on the problems relative to growth and productivity.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9783790808759
Publisher: Physica-Verlag HD
Publication date: 08/01/1995
Series: Contributions to Economics
Edition description: Softcover reprint of the original 1st ed. 1995
Pages: 355
Product dimensions: 7.01(w) x 10.00(h) x 0.02(d)

Table of Contents

Introductory Remarks.- I Competitiveness and Productivity: The Link Between Manufacturing and Service Sectors.- 1 Producer Services: Their Important Role in Growing Economies.- 2 Externalities and the Linkages Between Trade Sector and Manufacturing.- 3 Industrial Prices, Service Prices and Unemployment in Italy and Germany.- 4 The Growth of Market Service Sector in Italy.- 5 Indirect Productivity of Business Services Through Non-Material Investments.- II International and Intersectoral Differences in Productivity: Catching-up or Divergence?.- 6 Structure and Change in Distribution System: An Analysis of Seven OECD Member Countries.- 7 Does Productivity Converge Across Countries and Across Sectors? Empirical Evidences from Eight OECD Countries.- 8 Productivity Growth in Service and Non-Service Industries: Implications for Convergence.- 9 The Comparative Performance of Industrial and Service Firms in the Eighties: An Italian Story.- 10 The Productivity Differential Between Manufacturing and Services in Italy: Technical Progress or Competition Deficit?.
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