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Why Businesses Should Always Be Asking "What's Next?"

The recent explosion of computing and communication capability now makes it possible for doctors to perform complex surgery remotely, using high-definition imagery and sophisticated robotics. The financial industry never sleeps. The bottom line? Services will become increasingly prominent in international trade flows.
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Technology has transformed life in more ways than we can list. In just over a century, humans have learned how to fly, commute in cars, talk over wires and now through thin air, process trillions of digits in nanoseconds in microchips made out of sand -- and the list is just getting started. It's easy to be blasé about the pace of change, but those who ignore it do so at their own peril. If change has been so dramatic, it's essential to ask what's next.

Today, if a business isn't obsessed with the question, it should be. It's key to preserving and enhancing competitiveness in an increasingly globalized world. Among the many ongoing transformations is a critical macro-trend that we all need to watch. It has long since been observed that as economies progress through stages of development, they morph from a focus on primary industries -- like fishing, hunting, basic agriculture, rudimentary mining, and so on -- to an increasingly developed manufacturing sector, and finally the focus shifts to the service sector, which comes to dominate economic activity.

Today's developed economies all illustrate this trend in their recent growth. Back in 1970, manufacturing output accounted for about a quarter of the U.S. economy. Now, it accounts for just 12.4 per cent of GDP, and at the same time private sector services industries have risen from 53 per cent to two-thirds of the economy. The U.S. isn't alone; over the same time frame, UN data shows that the same trend is obvious in the U.K., Japan, Italy, Spain and a significant group of other OECD countries. Canada is no different; our service sector has increased more or less steadily in the same time frame to 70 per cent of total output.

Yet in spite of this huge transformation, for the bulk of this time period, international trade has remained dominated by movements of primary and manufactured goods. We are still of a mindset that an export is something that we can drop on our foot, and if not, well it is largely an activity that is confined to the domestic economy. Sure, there is trade in services like tourism and transportation, and to some extent financial activities. But in general, many still think of these as necessarily confined and limited activities.

Technology doesn't see it this way. The recent explosion of computing and communication capability now makes it possible for doctors to perform complex surgery remotely, using high-definition imagery and sophisticated robotics. The financial industry never sleeps, but merely exports digitally to the parts of the world where the sun is up. Globalization has increased the intensity of international travel. And that most textbook of all geographically-confined services - the haircut - is now itself at least conceivably exportable. One can imagine a signature stylist cutting a wealthy patron's hair half-way around the world with the same technology that surgeons use.

Data illustrate this trend. Technology is enabling services to grow as a share of trade in one economy after another. In the U.S., it is now 31 per cent of exports, up from just 17 per cent 50 years ago. In the U.K., a similar trend, and in Japan, while more muted, services account for 13.7 per cent of exports, up about a percentage point since 1980. Even Germany, with its manufacturing focus, has seen service exports rise from 13.4 per cent to 15.5 per cent of its total since 1991. Few economies are left out of this recent trend -- the ubiquity of technology is drawing business around the world into the same trend.

Will it continue? Almost certainly, unless technology goes into reverse. With the advent of 3-D printing, it is clear that ideas will be in greater circulation, and that geography will be far less important to international commerce. And the movement toward software-as-a-service operations suggests an even further reach for trade in services. They won't likely become as dominant in trade as they are in macro-economies, but services are likely to continue testing trade's limits in the coming years and decades.

The bottom line? Services will become increasingly prominent in international trade flows. As such, we need to get better at measuring services trade; at encouraging involvement in it; at developing policy that supports its development; and at facilitating its flows. It's one of the great waves of the future.

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