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comparison between the different numbers of workers in industrial and tertiary sectors in developed and developed countries

2006-08-27 04:30:04 · 2 answers · asked by Anonymous in Social Science Other - Social Science

2 answers

I am not finding much as to the distribution of workers in the sectors of industry, but I can say that understanding the impact of worker distribution requires that you understand all sectors of Industry, not just tertiary.

The Primary Sector makes raw materials out of natural resources. Trees become lumber
The Secondary Sector makes products from raw materials. Lumber, and other raw materials, becomes houses.
The Tertiary Sector takes products and sells them to consumers.

In earlier times and in underdeveloped countries now, worker distribution in the primary sector was(is) more heavily weighted. Our grandfathers made more of their own food that we do today. Underdeveloped countries are still making omre of their own food.

As countries develop worker distribution shifts toward the secondary and tertiary sectors. The education requirements of each sector are different, starting at primary where it isn't required much increasing to secondary and to tertiary where it is required most of the three. Developed countries are better able to supply the workers as they educate their work force better.

2006-09-01 15:44:13 · answer #1 · answered by Ken C. 6 · 0 0

Let me see .
I'll get back to you on that one though .

2006-08-29 10:22:16 · answer #2 · answered by Xavier 7 · 0 0

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