Deindustrialisation is the phenomenon of the secondary sector growing more slowly than the rest of the economy, whether measured by share of GDP or of employment. Almost all rich OECD countries have been experiencing it. However New Zealand has been deindustrialising faster than the OECD average (even if the energy based industries developed in the 1980 S are included). The paper describes the phenomenon, and discusses why it has happened.
Although the structure of employment has changed substantially over the long-term course of economic...
This paper takes the position that changes and trends in labour, employment and work (LEW) in New Ze...
Two issues which have attracted the attention of economists and policymakers in New Zealand in rece...
Ten years have now passed since New Zealand began the liberalisation and restructuring of its econom...
It is clear that in New Zealand that most of the net job loss can be attributed to the decline in ma...
As a stylised fact of deindustrialisation, the relationship between Gross Domestic Product (GDP) and...
Over the last decade or so New Zealand has been through an era of radical political, economic, socia...
Manufacturing in high-income countries is on the decline and Denmark is no exception. Manufacturing ...
Over a very long period of time, New Zealand's structural policy has devoted a low priority to the ...
As we emerge from a deep and long recession, the debate must shift again to how New Zealand can lift...
The purpose of this paper is to provide an in-depth study of deindustrialization and to systematical...
A paper presented to the 40th Congress of ANZAAS, Christchurch, 1968.Before devaluation in November ...
This paper reviews the literature and empirical evidence on deindustrialisation, with a focus on pre...
Theoretical and empirical studies show that deindustrialisation, broadly observed in developed count...
Why did a small urban based population think it could subsidise it's dominantly export agriculture? ...
Although the structure of employment has changed substantially over the long-term course of economic...
This paper takes the position that changes and trends in labour, employment and work (LEW) in New Ze...
Two issues which have attracted the attention of economists and policymakers in New Zealand in rece...
Ten years have now passed since New Zealand began the liberalisation and restructuring of its econom...
It is clear that in New Zealand that most of the net job loss can be attributed to the decline in ma...
As a stylised fact of deindustrialisation, the relationship between Gross Domestic Product (GDP) and...
Over the last decade or so New Zealand has been through an era of radical political, economic, socia...
Manufacturing in high-income countries is on the decline and Denmark is no exception. Manufacturing ...
Over a very long period of time, New Zealand's structural policy has devoted a low priority to the ...
As we emerge from a deep and long recession, the debate must shift again to how New Zealand can lift...
The purpose of this paper is to provide an in-depth study of deindustrialization and to systematical...
A paper presented to the 40th Congress of ANZAAS, Christchurch, 1968.Before devaluation in November ...
This paper reviews the literature and empirical evidence on deindustrialisation, with a focus on pre...
Theoretical and empirical studies show that deindustrialisation, broadly observed in developed count...
Why did a small urban based population think it could subsidise it's dominantly export agriculture? ...
Although the structure of employment has changed substantially over the long-term course of economic...
This paper takes the position that changes and trends in labour, employment and work (LEW) in New Ze...
Two issues which have attracted the attention of economists and policymakers in New Zealand in rece...