Skipping the Factory: Service-Led Growth and Structural Transformation in the Developing World
In today’s developing world, many economies appear to bypass industrialization and transition directly from agriculture to services. The largest rise in service employment has occurred in non-tradable consumer services, such as retail and hospitality, especially in urban areas, where many cities resemble consumer hubs built around local demand. These patterns of growth raise fundamental questions: Can service-led growth sustain a growth of living standards over time? Is service-led growth inherently biased toward affluent urban consumers? What role should policy play? We propose a parsimonious general equilibrium framework that incorporates non-homothetic preferences and locally non-tradable consumer services. Our framework bridges macro and micro perspectives, and enables counterfactual and welfare analysis that accounts for both individual and spatial heterogeneity. We relate our framework to the recent literature and suggest several extensions and directions of future research.
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Copy CitationMichael Peters, Youdan Zhang, and Fabrizio Zilibotti, "Skipping the Factory: Service-Led Growth and Structural Transformation in the Developing World," NBER Working Paper 34692 (2026), https://doi.org/10.3386/w34692.Download Citation