Productivity in the U.S. Services Sector: New Sources of Economic Growth

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Rowman & Littlefield, Sep 21, 2004 - Business & Economics - 401 pages

The services industries—which include jobs ranging from flipping hamburgers to providing investment advice—can no longer be characterized, as they have in the past, as a stagnant sector marked by low productivity growth. They have emerged as one of the most dynamic and innovative segments of the U.S. economy, now accounting for more than three-quarters of gross domestic product. During the 1990s, 19 million additional jobs were created in this sector, while growth was stagnant in the goods-producing sector. Here, Jack Triplett and Barry Bosworth analyze services sector productivity, demonstrating that fundamental changes have taken place in this sector of the U.S. economy. They show that growth in the services industries fueled the post-1995 expansion in the U.S. productivity and assess the role of information technology in transforming and accelerating services productivity. In addition to their findings for the services sector as a whole, they include separate chapters for a diverse range of industries within the sector, including transportation and communications, wholesale and retail trade, and finance and insurance. The authors also examine productivity measurement issues, chiefly statistical methods for measuring services industry output. They highlight the importance of making improvements within the U.S. statistical system to provide the more accurate and relevant measures essential for analyzing productivity and economic growth.

 

Contents

Introduction
1
Overview Industry Productivity Trends
6
Output and Productivity in the Transportation Sector
46
Output and Productivity Growth in the Communications Industry
71
Overview Productivity and Measurement in the Finance and Insurance Sector
95
Price Output and Productivity of Insurance Conceptual Issues
123
Measuring Banking and Finance Conceptual Issues
177
Output and Productivity in Retail Trade
233
Output and Productivity in Other Services
256
HighTech Capital Equipment Inputs to Services Industries
274
Data Needs
321
Industry Productivity Accounts 19872001
339
Workshops in the Brookings Program on Output and Productivity Measurement in the Services Sector
365
References
375
Index
389
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Page 378 - Report of the Sub-Committee on National Income Statistics of the League of Nations Committee of Statistical Experts. Appendix: Definition and Measurement of the National Income and Related Totals.
Page 377 - ... of National Accounts 1993 (published jointly by Eurostat, IMF, OECD, UN and World Bank) to include computer software as investment rather than intermediate input. The impact of the revisions, which raise the growth rate and the 1 990 benchmark GDP level is described in EP Seskin, "Improved Estimates of the National Income and Product Accounts for 1959-98: Results of the Comprehensive Revision", Survey of Current Business, December 1999.
Page 379 - National Bureau of Economic Research. Conference on Research in Income and Wealth (Studies in Income and Wealth, Vol. 10) New York, 1947.

About the author (2004)

Jack E. Triplett , is a visiting fellow in Economic Studies at the Brookings Institution. He served previously as a chief economist at the U.S. Bureau of Economic Analysis. He is the editor of Measuring the Prices of Medical Treatments (Brookings, 1999). Barry P. Bosworth is a senior fellow and Robert V. Roosa Chair in International Economics at the Brookings Institution.

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