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Statistics:
Production costs v. transaction costs in the US GDP Introduction:
Key
message:
In modern economies transaction costs have become equally (and perhaps more)
important than production costs. This is quite a development considering that
early economic theory (e.g., the perfect
market economy model) focused entirely on production costs assuming that
transaction costs did not exist. Implication for economic research: It
has become relatively more sensible to do research in transaction cost
dynamics rather than production cost dynamics. This is perhaps also contributing
to the surge of interest for research in corporate governance that clearly
has more to say about transaction cost dynamics rather than production cost
dynamics. The method used to calculate the numbers in the table below is
roughly this: For each sector in the national account the number of
workers in different occupations and a percentage of transactional work in
each occupation is estimated. Then the salaries of these workers have been
used to calculate the transactional part of the GDP in each sector. The
weighted average of these figures is the numbers shown in this table. To
illustrate, the following occupations have been deemed to be 100% transactional:
accountants, lawyers & judges, personal & labor relations, farm managers,
managers, clerical, sales workers, foremen, inspectors, guards, police,
military, and postal service. Industries with many non-transactional jobs
are: agriculture, mining, construction, manufacturing, and yes even transportation. |
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Source: Wallis, J., and D. C. North (Nobel laureate in
economics) [1986, page 121]. “Measuring the Transactions Sector in the
American Economy,” in Long Term Factors
in American Economic Growth, |
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- Copyright 1997-2008, ViamInvest. Reproduced with permission of the copyright owner. Further reproduction prohibited without permission. Legal notice. |