Abstract

All economic change, especially viewed in the long term, is connected with structural change. Its course brings changes in the Gross Domestic Product (with dominance passing from the primary sector to the secondary sector and finally to the tertiary sector). Hand in hand with this go major or minor changes in the sectoral structure of the overall economy and corresponding shifts in total employment. Worker qualification demands change, and geographic shifts in production take place. Economic growth is inconceivable without constant change in the economic structure—in other words, new distribution of production factors among sectors, industries and regions. It can be said that economic development means constant economic structural change.

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