Knowledge-intensive Services and International Competitiveness: A Four Country Comparison

The nature and consequences of services innovation remains a woefully under-researchedtopic. The paper calls into question two statements that are frequentlyrepeated in the political-economic discourse on services. The first concerns thesuggestion that Germany is a ‘services laggard’ that needs to restructure its domesticeconomy if it is to remain internationally competitive. By contrast, the UK is frequentlyheld up as an example of a successfully restructured ‘services economy’. The paperdraws an important distinction between the quantity of services in a domestic economyand the degree of connectivity between services and other economic activities. Thelatter, it is argued, is far more important in determining the size of spillovers fromservices innovation enjoyed within a domestic economy and, hence, to internationalcompetitiveness. Particular attention is paid to the role and impact of knowledge-intensiveservice sectors in this regard. In addition to the UK and Germany, data isdrawn from the Netherlands and Japan. Using these four comparative cases we explorethe distinction between a high representation of services in the domestic economy, andthe innovation spillovers facilitated by a high degree of connectivity between servicesand other economic sectors within a domestic economy.

[1]  Colin Clark,et al.  The Conditions of Economic Progress. , 1941 .

[2]  Nelson R. Kellogg,et al.  The Work of Nations: Preparing Ourselves for 21st-Century Capitalism by Robert B. Reich (review) , 1993, Technology and Culture.

[3]  Bruno Freund,et al.  Impact of information technologies on manufacturing , 1997 .

[4]  Harry Scarbrough,et al.  Making the Matrix Matter: Strategic Information Systems in Financial Services , 1997 .

[5]  Daniel A. Levinthal,et al.  ABSORPTIVE CAPACITY: A NEW PERSPECTIVE ON LEARNING AND INNOVATION , 1990 .

[6]  J. Bhagwati Manufacturing Matters: The Myth of the Postindustrial Economy , 1989 .

[7]  Israel. Lishkah ha-merkazit li-sṭaṭisṭiḳah Input-output tables , 1972 .

[8]  S. Illeris,et al.  The Service Economy: A Geographical Approach , 1996 .

[9]  Victor R. Fuchs,et al.  The Service Economy. , 1968 .

[10]  F. Blackler Knowledge, Knowledge Work and Organizations: An Overview and Interpretation , 1995 .

[11]  I. Steedman Fundamental Issues in Trade Theory , 1979 .

[12]  Kieron Flanagan,et al.  Recent Patterns of Services Innovation in the UK , 1997 .

[13]  R M Pitkin,et al.  An embarrassment of riches. , 1989, Obstetrics and gynecology.

[14]  G. Harcourt,et al.  Some Cambridge controversies in the theory of capital: Introduction , 1973 .

[15]  G. Harcourt,et al.  Some Cambridge Controversies in the Theory of Capital. , 1973 .

[16]  Bengt-Åke Lundvall,et al.  The Globalising Learning Economy: Implications for Innovation Policy , 1998 .

[17]  C. Antonelli Localized technological change, new information technology and the knowledge-based economy: The European evidence , 1998 .

[18]  Stephen S. Cohen,et al.  Manufacturing Matters: The Myth of Post-Industrial Economy , 1988 .

[19]  John R. Bryson,et al.  Small Firms, Business Services Growth and Regional Development in the United Kingdom: Some Empirical Findings , 1991 .