The Structure of Services in Europe: A Conceptual Framework

Working Paper: CEPR ID: DP498

Authors: Andre Sapir

Abstract: Thirty years ago, when the Treaty of Rome came into effect, agriculture and manufacturing dominated activity in the European Community (EC). Today, in every member state, services account for more production and employment than agriculture and manufacturing combined. The growing role of services in domestic economies is the result of both demand and supply factors. On the demand side, the major impetus has come from firms that have shifted from providing services they require `in-house' to purchasing these services outside the firm. On the supply side, the main factors have been technological change and deregulation. This paper is part of a study of the impact of 1992 on European service industries. Its purpose is to provide a methodological framework for analysing the structure of the market for services in Europe on the eve of 1992. The paper identifies three essential features that distinguish services from other economic activities. These features are used to examine in detail factors that determine the market structure of service industries. The conclusion offers conjectures about the future shape of service industries in Europe.

Keywords: european integration; market structure; regulation; services

JEL Codes: 423; 611619; 635


Causal Claims Network Graph

Edges that are evidenced by causal inference methods are in orange, and the rest are in light blue.


Causal Claims

CauseEffect
growing role of services in domestic economies (O14)shift from in-house to outsourced service provision by firms (L33)
growing role of services in domestic economies (O14)technological change (O33)
growing role of services in domestic economies (O14)deregulation (L51)
shift from in-house to outsourced service provision by firms (L33)market structure (D49)
technological change (O33)enhanced service provision (O35)
deregulation (L51)enhanced service provision (O35)
consumption of services must occur simultaneously with production (D26)non-storable nature of services (L80)
asymmetric information in service markets (D82)moral hazard and adverse selection (D82)
existing barriers to entry (D43)market competition and structure (L11)

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