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1992 | Buch

Services in Economic Thought

Three Centuries of Debate

verfasst von: Jean-Claude Delaunay, Jean Gadrey

Verlag: Springer Netherlands

Buchreihe : International Studies in the Service Economy

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Über dieses Buch

Services today account for a major share of employment and national product in the U. S. , with the employment share up from 57 percent immediately post-war to well over 70 percent today (if communications, utilities and transportation are included). This transformation (which is also occurring with varying lags in the othereconomically advanced economies) is driven by a variety of forces : by changes in consumer demand, by the rising demand for health and educational services, by new ways in which businesses are organized and the increasing importance ofcertain functions (e. g. new demands for monitoring, financing, sales promotion, and responding to regulatory agencies), and, closely related, by the continuing advances in electronic technology. Moreover, these multiple transformations have been accompanied by changes in the way work is carried out (e. g. the dramatic increases in the utilization of white collar workers, particularly professionals and managers, and the employment of women and educated workers), and by shifts in the location of work and of the population (e. g. rising importance of key cities within the urban system and of suburbs generally). The role of services in modem capitalistic economies is not yet integrated into the body of economic theory, although the need for such integration, especially as regards theories ofgrowth, market structure, and pricing, is critical. Some economists and sociologists, however, have since the days of Adam Smith, dealt with certain aspects of the role of services.

Inhaltsverzeichnis

Frontmatter
1. Introduction
Abstract
Around 1970, sociologists coined the term “post-industrial society” which at that time represented one among many theories concerning the development of modern society. Whether one supports this term or the related analyses, one has to admit that the authors recognized the fundamental changes then taking place.
Jean-Claude Delaunay, Jean Gadrey
2. Classical Doctrine on Services
Abstract
Capitalism has been the effective source of economic ideas concerning services. Before the industrial revolution, Mercantilists were the theoreticians of trade and commercial precapitalism. For them, services were rather creative of wealth. But their views were mainly guided by practical purposes: To get a better understanding of the ways to bring money to the Royal State Treasury.
Jean-Claude Delaunay, Jean Gadrey
3. Marx: Standard Theory and Potential Directions
Abstract
Karl Marx dealt with the role of service activities and their place in a capitalist society in Capital and in Theories of Surplus Value,1 particularly in his discussions of productive and nonproductive labour. Marx had no theory of services as such. Like Adam Smith before him, what Marx wrote about services is incidental, found in the context of some other discussion, thus making an interpretation difficult.
Jean-Claude Delaunay, Jean Gadrey
4. All is Productive, All is Service
Abstract
Much of the economic theory developed in the 1850–1930 period in France was limited to further criticism of Adam Smith, as initially supplied by Germain Gamier and Jean Baptiste Say. Thus, while Smith identified unproductive work with services, thereby splitting labour into two separate categories (productive and unproductive), later authors attempted to restore conceptual uniformity to all economic activities. The result was that by the end of the 19thcentury the notion of unproductive labour had virtually disappeared from economic literature. Joseph Schumpeterl devoted only a few lines to it and Paul Studenski2 who investigated the development of ideas in relation to the concept of production, only mentioned one author of any importance on this point (the Hungarian statistician Friedrich Feltner) who, at the beginning of the 20thcentury, still doggedly stuck to Smith’s definition of national income.
Jean-Claude Delaunay, Jean Gadrey
5. The Tertiary Sector and Post-Industrial Society
Abstract
In this section, we collect and examine the main themes in the analysis of service activities in the 1935–1965 period, beginning with the emergence and increasing use of the term tertiary sector.
Jean-Claude Delaunay, Jean Gadrey
6. Service Society Versus Neo-Industrialism
Abstract
The period of 1974–1975 marks the end of a phase of relative “optimism” in the analysis of the services. Indeed, many of those who earlier studied the services now express in the mid-1970s concern about the “services crisis” and its more visible manifestations, such as unemployment, inflation and lower rates of growth. Although the themes of post-industrial society do not disappear in later theoretical debates, by the late 1970s other opposing concepts begin to question the further continuation and development of the service society. This neo-industrial interpretation becomes the dominant way of analysing the development of the services.
Jean-Claude Delaunay, Jean Gadrey
Backmatter
Metadaten
Titel
Services in Economic Thought
verfasst von
Jean-Claude Delaunay
Jean Gadrey
Copyright-Jahr
1992
Verlag
Springer Netherlands
Electronic ISBN
978-94-011-2960-2
Print ISBN
978-94-010-5314-3
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/978-94-011-2960-2