The Service Sector in Asia: Is It an Engine of Growth?
Park, Donghyun; Shin, Kwanho | December 2012
Abstract
The underdeveloped service sector in Asia has the potential to become a new engine of economic growth for developing Asia, which has traditionally relied on export-oriented manufacturing to power its growth. The central objective of this paper is to empirically analyze the prospects for the service sector as a future engine of growth. Our analysis of 12 Asian economies indicates that the service sector already contributed substantially to the region’s growth in the past. Furthermore, somewhat surprisingly in light of the difficulty of achieving productivity gains in services, we also find that services labor productivity grew at a healthy pace in much of the region. Overall our analysis provides substantial cause for optimism about the role of the service sector as an engine of growth in Asia. However, some Asian countries where the service sector is currently struggling, such as the Republic of Korea and Thailand, will find it more challenging to develop the sector.
Citation
Park, Donghyun; Shin, Kwanho. 2012. The Service Sector in Asia: Is It an Engine of Growth?. © Asian Development Bank. http://hdl.handle.net/11540/1257. License: CC BY 3.0 IGO.ISSN
1655-5252
Keywords
Industry
Development Economics
Economic Models
Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development
Securities
Mines
Competition
Industrial competition
Unfair competition
Monopolies
Competition policy
Development cooperation
Economic discrimination
Industrial Development
Financial Services Industry
Industrial Sector
Competition
Comparative economics
Communication in economic development
Industrialization
Monopoly
Barriers to entry
Monopolistic competition
Restraint of trade
Price discrimination
Imperfect competition
Press monopoly
Diversification in industry
Unfair competition
Investment banking
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Citable URI
http://hdl.handle.net/11540/1257Metadata
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