We provide new evidence on patterns of structural change in advanced economies, reconsidering the stylised facts put forward by Kaldor (1963), Kuznets (1971), and Maddison (1980). Since 1980, the services sector has overwhelmingly predominated in the economic activity of the European Union, Japan, and the US, but there is substantial heterogeneity among services. Personal, finance, and business services have low productivity growth and increasing shares in employment and GDP. By contrast, shares of distribution services are constant, and productivity growth is rapid. We find that the labour share in value-added is declining, while the use of ICT capital and skilled labour is increasing in all sectors and regions.</p
How will structural change unfold beyond the rise of services? Motivated by the observed dynamics wi...
How will structural change unfold beyond the rise of services? Motivated by the observed dynamics wi...
This paper looks at structural change as one additional source of decline in the wage share. First, ...
We provide new evidence on patterns of structural change in advanced economies, reconsidering the st...
We provide new evidence on patterns of structural change in advanced economies, reconsidering the st...
We provide new evidence on patterns of structural change in advanced economies, reconsidering the st...
We provide new evidence on patterns of structural change in advanced economies, reconsidering the st...
We provide new evidence on patterns of structural change in advanced economies, reconsidering the st...
We provide new evidence on patterns of structural change in advanced economies, reconsidering the st...
We provide new evidence on patterns of structural change in advanced economies, reconsidering the st...
We provide new evidence on patterns of structural change in advanced economies, reconsidering the st...
We provide new evidence on patterns of structural change in advanced economies, reconsidering the st...
We provide new evidence on patterns of structural change in advanced economies, reconsidering the st...
This paper examines broad patterns of structural change for a large number of countries on a global ...
The paper provides fresh empirical evidence on the relative role of changes in final and intermediat...
How will structural change unfold beyond the rise of services? Motivated by the observed dynamics wi...
How will structural change unfold beyond the rise of services? Motivated by the observed dynamics wi...
This paper looks at structural change as one additional source of decline in the wage share. First, ...
We provide new evidence on patterns of structural change in advanced economies, reconsidering the st...
We provide new evidence on patterns of structural change in advanced economies, reconsidering the st...
We provide new evidence on patterns of structural change in advanced economies, reconsidering the st...
We provide new evidence on patterns of structural change in advanced economies, reconsidering the st...
We provide new evidence on patterns of structural change in advanced economies, reconsidering the st...
We provide new evidence on patterns of structural change in advanced economies, reconsidering the st...
We provide new evidence on patterns of structural change in advanced economies, reconsidering the st...
We provide new evidence on patterns of structural change in advanced economies, reconsidering the st...
We provide new evidence on patterns of structural change in advanced economies, reconsidering the st...
We provide new evidence on patterns of structural change in advanced economies, reconsidering the st...
This paper examines broad patterns of structural change for a large number of countries on a global ...
The paper provides fresh empirical evidence on the relative role of changes in final and intermediat...
How will structural change unfold beyond the rise of services? Motivated by the observed dynamics wi...
How will structural change unfold beyond the rise of services? Motivated by the observed dynamics wi...
This paper looks at structural change as one additional source of decline in the wage share. First, ...