The US economy has undergone significant shifts towards services and towards information intensive industries. The latter trend has been driven by advances in information technology. These advances have concurrently led to substantial changes in the production and delivery of services, especially notable in information-intensive sectors. We examine these changes from the perspective of “service industrialization”, since they are similar in many ways to the historical industrialization of goods production. We focus on the effect of industrialization on employment and wages, and identify certain important consequences of this direction. One major consequence is the impact on the customer facing services and the “front office” in addition to the effect on service processes in the “back room”. An important aggregate result is a decline in white collar jobs in both those categories. A larger effect is at the sector level, with significant disruptions in some sectors leading to their substantial restructuring. Such disruptions are likely to occur in other information intensive sectors as well.
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1 July 2020
Research Article|
July 01 2020
Service Industrialization, Employment and Wages in the US Information Economy Available to Purchase
Hiranya Nath;
Hiranya Nath
Sam Houston State University
, Huntsville, TX 77341, USA
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Uday Apte;
Uday Apte
Naval Postgraduate School
, Monterey, CA 93943, USA
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Uday Karmarkar
Uday Karmarkar
UCLA Anderson School of Management
, Los Angeles, CA 90095, USA
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Online ISSN: 1571-9553
Print ISSN: 1571-9545
© 2020 H. Nath, U. Apte and U. Karmarkar
2020
H. Nath, U. Apte and U. Karmarkar
Licensed re-use rights only
Foundations and Trends in Technology, Information and Operations Management (2020) 13 (4): 250–343.
Citation
Nath H, Apte U, Karmarkar U (2020), "Service Industrialization, Employment and Wages in the US Information Economy". Foundations and Trends in Technology, Information and Operations Management, Vol. 13 No. 4 pp. 250–343, doi: https://doi.org/10.1561/0200000050
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