Thank you, Mr. Chairman.
Thank you very much for inviting the OECD to say a few words about our work on services.
I'd like to make three points and elaborate on them a little bit. First, I think the services sector is becoming more and more important in the OECD area. Nevertheless, we feel there is more that can be done to make it more dynamic. Secondly, we think the services sector is really of vital importance for all OECD economies for the future, because this is where the growth of economies is really coming from. And third, there are some policy issues that I think are important to make sure that this sector grows more rapidly.
I think the previous speaker already mentioned that services have become a very important source of employment growth. Most of the jobs currently being generated in the economy, in all OECD economies, really come from services. As well, an increasing part of productivity growth is coming from the services sector.
I think there is potential there for the sector to make a difference, but we see still large differences in some countries where the services sector does not create a lot of jobs, countries where productivity growth is probably not as rapid as it could be. We need to pick up on the potential that's there thanks to a growing trade in services internationally and thanks to, as the previous speaker mentioned, information technology.
We also see that services now account for a growing share of innovation in the economy. In Canada, for instance, about 40% of R and D is carried out in the services sector. We see, in some of the indicators we have, that services can be just as innovative in terms of new products and processes they generate in the manufacturing sector, but we still don't recognize a lot of it. We don't necessarily notice that so much innovation is going on in the services sector.
I think that particularly for the future of OECD economies and the Canadian economy, it's really crucial to get this sector more innovative and more dynamic. There are some policy issues that I think are important, and I'll mention three.
The first issue is really the opening of the services market. If we say that the sector can be more dynamic, can be more tradeable, can be more international, then it is really important that we have enough competition going on in the services sector. Sometimes we still feel that the services sector is not really ready for competition, but I think a lot of the experience we see across the OECD is that if you do open them up--and I think we've seen this very clearly in Europe--then you can generate a large number of new services and new jobs in such sectors as leisure, health, business services, and other sectors where there's large potential for new jobs to be created.
Secondly, if we look at innovation policies, they are still very much focused in most countries on the manufacturing sector. A lot of the support provided by governments in most OECD countries for innovation typically goes to manufacturing companies, often because services firms don't know that the support can actually be made available to them as well. So to adapt better the policies we have for science, technology, and innovation to the services sector can be quite important.
Third, get the environment for information technology right. This is technology that has enabled the sector to become more dynamic, to become a source for job growth and for productivity growth. That's something that I think many countries are struggling with--to get broadband in all homes, to get broadband to all companies, to make sure that people have trust in information technology and are willing to use it, and to make sure that we have some of these new services being generated that now the Internet is really delivering for us.
So in some, I think, there really is potential with this sector. There is a lot of interest in this topic, not only in Canada but across the OECD, where many countries are looking into what can be done to make this sector more dynamic and to adapt policies. Of course, our work on this issue is available for your deliberations as well.
I will leave it at that. Thank you very much.