Discussion Papers 1993. 
Spatial Research and the Social-Political Changes 67-84. p.
TERTIARY EMPLOYMENT 
67 
TERTIARY EMPLOYMENT 
IN SOME CENTRAL EUROPEAN 
COUNTRIES ABOUT 1980 
ANDRZEJ WERWICKI 
The application of employment indices to analyze the development of services often 
meets criticism, reasonable in the case of some of them, especially those of the sociocul-
tural sphere of services, which employ far fewer people than their social role would indi-
cate. However, it does not alter the fact that employment remains the only objective index, 
comparable in time and space, that allows for an international study of endowment with 
services. Remembering the limitations mentioned above, employment data have been ac-
cepted as a basis for illustrating differences in the development of services in five Central 
European countries: Czechoslovakia, the German Democratic Republic, Hungary, Poland 
and Romania. The statistical data used have been collected from the turn of the 1970s and 
1980s. The grouping of data into spheres and branches of services originates from the 
author's earlier studies (WERWICKI, A. 1987), which assumes that all branches of the 
national economy, apart from agriculture, forestry, fishing, mining, manufacturing and 
construction, represent service activities. In this way not only strictly productive activities 
were excluded from the analysis but also all productive services, employment in which in 
the discussed countries is being registered together with that branch of economy for which 
those services have been rendered. Therefore the object of this analysis must be limited to 
the sub-system of consumption and public services composed of three spheres: market, 
socio-cultural and civil services. The differences in the number of detailed items in the 
national statistics of the countries in question determined, however, that further analysis 
has been carried through only in a division into two spheres of services: the market and 
socio-cultural ones, the latter comprising also the civil services. This also means the return 
to the traditional division of the third sector of economic activities into two groups —
material and non-material services (NOWOSIELSKA, E. 1972) — or, as some authors 
suggested (BORCHERT, J. G. 1980), into the third and fourth sectors of activities. 
The regional differentiation of employment structures has been discussed first of all by 
countries, and secondly inside them, by the first order administrative units. In Czechoslo-
vakia they are 'kraj'-s (lands), in the GDR — 'Bezirk'-s, in Hungary — 'megye'-s, in 
Poland — voivodships and in Romania — 'judet'-s. 
PERSONS ACTIVE IN SERVICES IN THE BACKGROUND OF THE 
GROSS AND NON-AGRICULTURAL EMPLOYMENT 
The first question arising in an analysis of service employment concerns both the ab- 

Andrzej Werwicki : Tertiary Employment in Some Central European Countries about 1980. 
In: Spatial Research and the Social-Political Changes. Pécs: Centre for Regional Studies, 
1993. 67-84. p. Discussion Papers. Special
68 
ANDRZEJ WERWICKI 
solute and relative parts played by it in the gross employment of any analyzed territory. 
Important also is the share of service employment in the structure of non-agricultural em-
ployment. 
Among the countries in question Poland had the biggest absolute number of persons 
employed in services, however, in relation to the total employment it accounted for only 
34.2% (48.9% in relation to the non-agricultural employment), while the share of those 
employed in agriculture and forestry accounted for 30.2% and those employed in mining, 
manufacturing and construction for as much as 35.6%.  (Table 1)  In the GDR service em-
ployment took second place in its absolute number and, at the same time, it had the highest 
shares in relation to gross and non-agricultural employment among the countries dis-
cussed (46.0 and 51.5%, respectively). Czechoslovakia and Hungary also had high shares 
of service employment in relation to both total and non-agricultural ones, although their 
absolute service employment was relatively small. Romania had the lowest share of ser-
vice employment: it accounted for only 25.2% of the gross employment and for 39.3% of 
the non-agricultural one; agriculture in Romania at the same time provided employment 
to 36.8%, and manufacturing with mining and construction to 38.0% of professionally 
active persons. Comparing these data with respective ones of the most developed coun-
tries of the world  (Table 2),  it may be stated that the GDR, Czechoslovakia and Hungary 
have already entered the post-industrial stage of economic development, while Poland 
still remains in the stage of industrial domination accompanied by a high share of agricul-
tural employment. Romania at the same time had an employment structure typical of the 
transitional period from an agricultural to an industrial economy. 
The international differences discussed find their reflection in the internal diversifica-
tion of the countries in question. To show these differences, a classification of territorial 
units has been evolved, based on the shares of non-agricultural employment compared 
with their mean values for the studied countries on the one hand, and, on the other, on the 
rates of employment in industry and construction as well as in services, calculated as 
shares of the non-agricultural employment, also compared to the respective means for the 
countries in question. As the scheme to  Figure 1 shows, they allow for a distinction of nine 
classes of units, of which class 2, 5 and 8 are transitional as compared with the purely 
productive (classes 1, 4 and 7) and servicing ones (classes 3, 6 and 9). In the countries in 
question classes 1 and 2 with a distinctive agricultural character of employment and the 
lowest shares of service employment appear only in Romania where they cover as much 
as 29% of all the territorial units  (Figure 1). However, in Romania the largest share be-
longs to class 4 (33%) with a mixed industrial and agricultural structure of employment. 
Besides this one in Romania only one other unit—in Poland—belongs to this class. Six 
other Romanian 'judet'-s had an industrial structure of employment (class 7), like the 
Katowice voidvodship in Poland and three 'megye'-s in Northern Hungary (Borsod-
Abatij-Z,emplen, Komarom, NOgrad). There are only seven units in Romania belonging to 
classes with a service type structure of employment (classes 3, 6 and 9). On the contrary, 
class 9 with high shares of both industrial and service employment dominated in the GDR 
(53% of all units) and Czechoslovakia (50% of the units). In these countries it has been 
accompanied almost exclusively by the similar class 8 with an intermediate employment 
structure between a highly industrial and industrial and a service one, often appearing also 

Andrzej Werwicki : Tertiary Employment in Some Central European Countries about 1980. 
In: Spatial Research and the Social-Political Changes. Pécs: Centre for Regional Studies, 
1993. 67-84. p. Discussion Papers. Special
TERTIARY EMPLOYMENT 
69 
in Hungary (40% of the existing units). hi Poland only five voivodships had the structure 
of class 8. It is to be noted that classes 8 and 9 representing an employment structure with 
high shares of both industrial and service employment  have also been typical of the capi-
tals of all the studied countries, as well as for most territorial units comprising big cities. 
In Poland the most numerous were units belonging to class 6 (30%) with a mixed employ-
ment structure—industrial-agricultural and service one. A further 22% of voivodships was 
represented by class 3 with an agricultural and service structure of employment. Apart 
from Poland only one 'judet' in Romania (Constanta) had such a structure. Based on the 
above discussion it may be stated that Czechoslovakia, the GDR and Hungary are coun-
tries with harmoniously developed employment structures. In Poland it is the agricultural 
and service as well as industrial and service structures that proved to be dominant, both 
with high shares of service employment resulting mostly from a deficit in other non-agri-
cultural productive functions. In Romania agricultural as well as industrial and agricultu-
ral structures were dominant. 
An analysis of the percentage distribution of the service employment in the total num-
ber of professionally active persons may serve as proper means for a further supplemen-
tation of the above diversification of the countries in question. These shares were the 
lowest in Romania where only one fourth of all the territorial units had a service employ-
ment share larger than the national mean and where only in two units (Bucuresti and 
Constanta) did they exceed the mean value for the five countries examined. This indicates 
that in 31 units the shares of service employment did not exceed the value of 25% of the 
gross employment. hi Czechoslovakia and the GDR the situation was just the opposite. 
All their administrative units had percentage shares of service employment higher than 
the mean value for the five countries. Furthermore, the shares of service employment were 
much higher than this average in most of their territorial units. In this respect Poland and 
Hungary held an intermediate position. The international mean, only slightly higher than 
the national means for these countries, exceeded in Hungary 55% of the 'megye'-s, while 
in Poland 30% of the existing voivodships. The dominant group of units in Poland was 
represented by voivodships with service employment shares lower than 30% of those en-
gaged in the non-agricultural sector of the economy. These voivodships were located in 
the central and Eastern parts of the country.  (Figure 2) There were only two such units in 
Hungary. The picture shown above indicates the existence of a certain regularity which 
relies on the fact that the higher the national shares of service employment were, the larger 
the numbers were of territorial units with shares higher than the international mean. It may 
also be noted that in the immediate neighbourhood of capitals which are normally the 
biggest national concentrations of service activities, there usually appeared units with 
much lower shares of service employment. 
The above internal diversification of the countries in question, although very general 
because of the size of the teritorial units analyzed (especially in Czechoslovakia), and, 
resulting from this, their functionally diversified content indicate the existence of some 
regularities which allow for the definition on an international scale of several levels of 
service development. 

Andrzej Werwicki : Tertiary Employment in Some Central European Countries about 1980. 
In: Spatial Research and the Social-Political Changes. Pécs: Centre for Regional Studies, 
1993. 67-84. p. Discussion Papers. Special
70 
ANDRZEJ WERWICKI 
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Andrzej Werwicki : Tertiary Employment in Some Central European Countries about 1980. 
In: Spatial Research and the Social-Political Changes. Pécs: Centre for Regional Studies, 
1993. 67-84. p. Discussion Papers. Special
TERTIARY EMPLOYMENT 
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Andrzej Werwicki : Tertiary 
• 
Employment in Some Central European Countries about 1980. 
In: Spatial Research and the Social-Political Changes. Pécs: Centre for Regional Studies, 
1993. 67-84. p. Discussion Papers. Special
72 
ANDRZEJ WERWICKI 
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Andrzej Werwicki : Tertiary Employment in Some Central European Countries about 1980. 
In: Spatial Research and the Social-Political Changes. Pécs: Centre for Regional Studies, 
1993. 67-84. p. Discussion Papers. Special
TERTIARY EMPLOYMENT 
73 

Andrzej Werwicki : Tertiary Employment in Some Central European Countries about 1980. 
In: Spatial Research and the Social-Political Changes. Pécs: Centre for Regional Studies, 
1993. 67-84. p. Discussion Papers. Special
74 
ANDRZEJ WERWICKI 
THE STRUCTURE OF SERVICE EMPLOYMENT 
Particular countries are often more diversified by the structure of employment in ser-
vices than by their shares in the gross and non-agricultural employment. At the beginning 
it may be stated that the higher the level of development in a certain country is, both 
economically and culturally, the lower the share is of market services in total service em-
ployment. On the contrary, the lower this level is, the higher the share is in this sphere of 
services. (Table 3) In Czechoslovakia, for example, the sphere of market services employs 
about 55% of persons active in the service sector, which also indicates that more than 45% 
of them act in the sphere of socio-cultural and civil services. Similar indices characterize 
the GDR. In Poland and Romania the shares of employment in market services exceeds 
60% of the total service employment, which indicates that people active in socio-cultural 
and civil services do not even reach the value of 40% of that employment. Hungary with 
59% share of service employment in the sphere of market services is in an intermediate 
position. The differences in the relative sizes of the two main spheres of service find con-
firmation in the differences in the number of persons active in each of the spheres men-
tioned per 1,000 inhabitants, which will be discussed in more detail later. 
The international diversification of these countries, which is based on the differences 
in the structure of service employment, is not big but, nevertheless, very characteristic. 
The dominant shares are generally close to the national means. More significant devia-
tions appear only in territorial units containing big cities, centres of cultural activity and 
public administration, where the shares of market services are usually much lower than in 
the neighbouring areas. This is especially true in the case of Poland but concerns also 
Hungary, the GDR and Romania.  (Figure 3)  It is only in Czechoslovakia where both 
Prague and Bratislava had higher shares of employment in market services than in the 
neighbourhood. Heavily industrialized areas, seaports or border re-loading stations, as 
well as agricultural areas with a deficit in the sphere of socio-cultural services are usually 
also characterized by higher shares of market services than the national means. 
The employment structure of market services 
Irrespective of the country and its socio-economic system, the share of market services 
in the total of service employment is always higher than the share of the remaining 
spheres. The employment in distribution, which from the point of view of population, is 
the most important branch of market services, seems to be the decisive factor of the mar-
ket service employment structure. In better developed Central European countries the 
share of distribution oscillates close to 40% of the employment in the market services, i.e. 
around 10% of the gross national employment (Hungary, Czechoslovakia and the GDR). 
In Poland and Romania, however, it drops below 35% of the employment in the market 
services  (Table 4),  that is, to the level of 5-7% of the gross employment. In the highly 
developed West European countries, however, the share of distribution in the gross em-
ployment rises up to 14-20%.  (Table 2) 

Andrzej Werwicki : Tertiary Employment in Some Central European Countries about 1980. 
In: Spatial Research and the Social-Political Changes. Pécs: Centre for Regional Studies, 
1993. 67-84. p. Discussion Papers. Special
TERTIARY EMPLOYMENT 
75 
 
 
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Andrzej Werwicki : Tertiary Employment in Some Central European Countries about 1980. 
In: Spatial Research and the Social-Political Changes. Pécs: Centre for Regional Studies, 
1993. 67-84. p. Discussion Papers. Special
76 
ANDRZEJ WERWICKI 

Andrzej Werwicki : Tertiary Employment in Some Central European Countries about 1980. 
In: Spatial Research and the Social-Political Changes. Pécs: Centre for Regional Studies, 
1993. 67-84. p. Discussion Papers. Special
TERTIARY EMPLOYMENT 
77 
Transportation and communication in terms of employment is the second biggest 
branch of market services. It provided work for about 30% of those employed in the 
sphere discussed. Among the studied countries, Hungary and Romania had the highest 
shares of employment in transportation and communication, while Czechoslovakia and 
the GDR had the lowest ones.  (Table 4) In relation to the gross employment the shares of 
transportation and communication oscillated between 5-8%, which means that they were 
slightly higher than in highly developed countries. 
Table 4 
Structure of employment in market services about 1980 
Professionally active in market services 
In transportation 
In "remaining 
Country 
Total 
and 
In distribution 
branches" 
communication 
• 
Thou- 
Thou- 
Thou- 
Thou- 




sands 
sands 
sands 
sands 
Czechoslovakia 
1,646.1 
100.0 
492.8 
29.9 
707.8 
43.0 
445.5 
27.1 
GDR 
2,137.3 
100.0 
613.9 
28.7 
849.9 
39.8 
673.5 
31.5 
Hungary 
1,161.4 
100.0 
404.5 
34.8 
512.6 
44.1 
244.3 
21.1 
Poland 
3,489.6 
100.0 
1,117.8 
32.0 
1,131.0 
32.4 
1,240.8 
35.6 
Romania 
1,674.0 
100.0 
556.5 
33.2 
575.2 
34.4 
542.3 
32.4 
Countries studied  10,108.4  100.0 
3,185.5 
31.5 
3,776.5 
37.4 
3,146.4 
31.1 
totals 
Source:  National statistics and the author's calculations 
Decisive for the size of employment in the "remaining market services" group were 
the craft and communal services. Among the countries studied the GDR and Poland had 
the most developed craft services, while Romania revealed the less developed ones. 
Communal services were of some importance only in cities where they were concen-
trated. Together with the "remaining branches" of market services, they provided employ-
ment for about one third of people active in the sphere. Hungary is an exception with a 
share of only 21% of the "remaining branches" in total employment in market services, 
which resulted mostly from a deficit of craft services. 
Twelve regional combinations of the structure of employment in the market services 
have been distinguished. Their appearance, although to some extent chaotic, has some 
regularities, resulting from the range of employment in particular branches. In case of a 
country in which employment in distribution forms the biggest group, most often there 
appear territorial units in which a combination of distribution with the "remaining bran- 

Andrzej Werwicki : Tertiary Employment in Some Central European Countries about 1980. 
In: Spatial Research and the Social-Political Changes. Pécs: Centre for Regional Studies, 
1993. 67-84. p. Discussion Papers. Special
78 
ANDRZEJ WERWICKI 
ches" of market services dominates (the GDR and Czechoslovakia). While in those coun-
tries in which distribution and transportation with communication employ almost an equal 
number of people, the most numerous are the units in which these two branches dominate 
• (Poland and Romania). In such countries units with large employment in the "remaining 
branches" are also numerous. These units are usually agricultural in character with low 
shares of transportation and a deficit of distribution, or they are units with low shares in 
market services in general, like big cities where special and rare services are important, 
while distribution and transportation are not so developed (in terms of employment). 
Some regularities also resulted from the structure of gross employment. In countries 
where shares of service employment are high (the GDR and Czechoslovakia), the compo-
sition of structural classes differs from those with low shares (Poland and Romania). 
Employment structure in the sphere of socio-cultural services 
The main components of the sphere of socio-cultural and civil services are as follows: 
science, education, health care, social security and public administration (both central and 
local). National employment statistics of the countries in question do not allow for a spe-
cification of the employment in administration. In the case of the GDR the regional data 
for science, education and health care services are only estimates. The data for Hungary 
do not even allow for any specification of particular employment groups forming the 
socio-cultural sphere of services for the whole country. Therefore, the analysis of the em-
ployment structure of the sphere in question has been limited to three main professional 
groups: science and education, health care services and social security, and the "remaining 
branches" of the sphere discussed. For Hungary such a distinction was not even possible. 
Therefore in the analysis this country has been omitted. 
The most frequent group of the socio-cultural and civil services, excluding the "re-
maining branches", was that containing employees in science and education, education 
being dominant. In Poland and Romania this group comprised more than 40% of the total 
employment in the sphere; 30% in Czechoslovakia and the GDR. The differentiation of 
the studied countries according to the role played by employment in the health care ser-
vices and social security was small; employment in this group oscillated in a very limited 
range: from 25.6% to 29.4% of the total employment in the sphere.  (Table 5)  Significant 
differences appeared in the size of employment in the "remaining branches" group of 
socio-cultural and civil services: from 27.5% in Poland to 44.6% in Czechoslovakia. The 
size of this group depends mainly on the number of people employed in civil services, i.e. 
in administration, judicature and related professional groups. In Czechoslovakia people 
employed in the civil services represented 29% and in Romania more than 46% of the 
total number of people employed in the "remaining branches", while in Poland only 5.6%. 
A major part of the discussed group consisted of people employed in culture (15%) and 
engaged in sports, touristic and recreational services. 
The internal, regional differentiation of the countries studied based not only on the 
structures of employment in the discussed sphere. It was also connected with the relative 
sizes of particular professional groups. The higher the mean shares of a group in a country, 

Andrzej Werwicki : Tertiary Employment in Some Central European Countries about 1980. 
In: Spatial Research and the Social-Political Changes. Pécs: Centre for Regional Studies, 
1993. 67-84. p. Discussion Papers. Special
TERTIARY EMPLOYMENT 
79 
Table 5 
Structure of employment in socio-cultural and civil services about 1980 
Professionally active in socio-cultural and civil services 
In health care 
In science and 
In "remaining 
Country 
Total 
services and 
education 
branches" 
social security 
Thou- 
Thou- 
Thou- 
Thou- 




sands 
sands 
sands 
sands  
Czechoslovakia 
1,361.6 
100.0 
406.2 
29.8 
348.7 
25.6 
606.7 
44.6 
GDR 
1,682.2 
100.0 
442.6 
32.2 
493.9 
29.4 
745.7 
38.4 
Hungary 
806.9 
100.0 






Poland 

2,2273 
100.0 
964.8 
43.3 
650.6 
29.2 
612.1 
27.5 
Romania 
1,402.2 
100.0 
460.3 
44.2 
278.9 
26.8 
303.0 
29.0 
Countries studied 
7,120.4 
100.0 

-  - 



totals 
Countries studied 
6,313.5 
100.0 
2,273.9 
36.0 
1,772.1 
28.1 
2,267.5 
35.9 
without Hungary 
Source:  National statistics and the author's calculations 
the more often units dominated by that group appeared. The best illustration of this thesis 
is Romania with the highest share of those employed in science and education among 
these countries. As a result, this group dominated in the structure of employment in the 
socio-cultural and civil services of all territorial units. Only in two of them, out of the 
existing 41, did employment in the "remaining branches" co-dominate. Employment in 
health care in Romania, although generally lower than in the other countries, in 34 units 
exceeded the national mean indicating a relatively even distribution within the country. 
Czechoslovakia also reveals large uniformity in the employment structure of the socio-
cultural and civil service sphere. Generally dominant was the group of "remaining bran-
ches", as a result of the large number of employees in administration, sometimes accom-
panied by science and education (Slovakia), or by health care (Bohemia). In the GDR, a 
country with a high share of socio-cultural services in the total service employment, in 
most of the existing units (12 of 15) two professional groups co-dominated the sphere: 
science with education and the "remaining branches". (In the three other units the "re-
maining branches" predominated.) As opposed to the GDR, Poland was the most diversi-
fied country in terms of the employment structure of the sphere discussed. Employment in 
science and education was the dominant group in 48 of the existing 49 territorial units. In 
two of them the "remaining branches" were dominant and it is the branches that absolute-
ly dominated the last unit left. In many voivodships employment in health care services 
was also high, although lower than the international mean, similar to Romania. The lack 
of proper data for Hungary eliminated any possibility of an analysis of the internal diver-
sity in the country in terms of socio-cultural and civil services. 

Andrzej Werwicki : Tertiary Employment in Some Central European Countries about 1980. 
In: Spatial Research and the Social-Political Changes. Pécs: Centre for Regional Studies, 
1993. 67-84. p. Discussion Papers. Special
80 
ANDRZEJ WERWICKI 
SERVICE EMPLOYMENT AND POPULATION 
Satisfaction of the demand on services depends not so much on the absolute number 
of persons engaged in service activities, as it does when the relationship between this 
number and the number of population living in a particular territory is considered. The 
demand on services itself is the result of the standard of living in the society, of its ways 
of living, and especially of the degree of its professional activity. Univocal determination 
of these dependencies is not yet possible. Their impact, however, is undisputable and fmds 
confirmation in  Figure 4. Based on the example of countries that are highly developed 
economically (according to the general opinion they fully satisfy the demand on services), 
one may trace clear relations between the indices of professional activity, the shares of 
persons engaged in service activities and the standard of living. The richer a country is and 
the higher the professional activity of its population, the higher the share of people en-
gaged in services. To a certain extent, one may also guess the influence ways of living 
have on the size of service employment. For example, in countries known as thrifty and 
economical, like Germany, Sweden or Switzerland, the share of employees in services is 
lower than in other countries with similar economic standards (the USA, France, Britain). 
The Central European countries analyzed do not exhibit such regularities mostly because 
of the underdevelopment of service sector in their economy. On the graph  (Figure 4)  
relationship can only be found between the standard of living and the share of service 
employment. In this respect two groups of countries can be distinguished: those with 
. higher living standards (Czechoslovakia, the GDR and Hungary) and others with lower 
standards (Bulgaria, Poland and Romania). In terms of professional activity these groups 
do not differ, moreover, both show an identical range of diversity: from 46% to about 
50%. Based on this one may hazard a hypothesis that the size of service employment in 
countries with a deficit of service activities depends only on the level of economic devel-
opment and the number of population, and does not correlate with the index of profes-
sional activity. This also indicates an underestimation of the impact of this index on the 
demand on certain services in these countries. As a result, the size of service employment 
is centrally regulated according only to the population number and its financial possi-
bilities. 
The number of people employed in services in these countries oscillated from 126 per 
1,000 inhabitants in Romania, to 228 per 1,000 inhabitants in the GDR. It may be stated, 
therefore, that the degree of satisfaction of the demand on services was almost twice as 
high in the GDR as in Romania, disregarding the fact that the demand on services depends 
not only on the standards of living of a society but also on the supply of services, i.e. on 
the access to certain economic units which may secure a rational use of durable material 
goods and one's personal time. The degree of satisfaction of the demand on services in 
Czechoslovakia is nearly the same as in the GDR, while in Poland nearly the same as in 
Romania. Hungary, in this respect, had an intermediate position.  (Table 3) 
The international diversification of particular countries reflected the general level of 
satisfaction of the demand on services.  (Figure 5) In the GDR, for example, per 1,000 
inhabitants in all territorial units there were at least 200 persons employed in services, i.e. 
as many as the other countries had almost exclusively in their capitals. The number of 

Andrzej Werwicki : Tertiary Employment in Some Central European Countries about 1980. 
In: Spatial Research and the Social-Political Changes. Pécs: Centre for Regional Studies, 
1993. 67-84. p. Discussion Papers. Special
TERTIARY EMPLOYMENT 
81 
Figure 
Service employment on the background of professional activity of population in selected 
countries about 1980 
.1. 
70 
• 13 
• 1 
• 
60 
• 12 

• 4 
3• 
 
• 5 
50 
• 6 
• 


.14 
40 
• 9 
• 10 
30 
01 

20 


30 
40 
50 
60  .1. 

A — share of people active in 
3  — Spain; 
8  — Hungary; 
services; 
4  — Switzerland; 
9  — Poland; 
B — index of professional 
5  — Federal 
10  — Bulgaria; 
activity 
Republic of Germany; 
11  — Romania; 
6  — Austria; 
12  — France; 
1 — Sweden; 
7  — German Democratic 
13  — USA; 
2 — United Kingdom; 
Republic; 
14  — Czechoslovakia 

Andrzej Werwicki : Tertiary Employment in Some Central European Countries about 1980. 
In: Spatial Research and the Social-Political Changes. Pécs: Centre for Regional Studies, 
1993. 67-84. p. Discussion Papers. Special
82 
ANDRZEJ WERWICKI 

Andrzej Werwicki : Tertiary Employment in Some Central European Countries about 1980. 
In: Spatial Research and the Social-Political Changes. Pécs: Centre for Regional Studies, 
1993. 67-84. p. Discussion Papers. Special
TERTIARY EMPLOYMENT 
83 
persons employed in services in Czechoslovakia was relatively even and oscillated  be-
tween  
150 and 200 people per 1,000 inhabitants. In Romania in 11 out of the existing 41 
territorial units this number dropped below 100 persons per 1,000 inhabitants and in a 
further 24, although it oscillated between 100 and 125, it was still lower than the national 
mean. In Romania there were higher numbers than the mean value only in 6 units, charac-
terized by the the highest values with Constanta (150) and Bucuresti (200 persons per 
1,000 inhabitants). For Poland and Hungary larger regional differences were typical: a 
mixture of units with an employment in services per 1,000 inhabitants near the interna-
tional mean, with units showing a clear deficit of services. The last kind, with a service 
employment not higher than 150 persons per 1,000 inhabitants covered almost entirely 
North-Eastern and Central Poland as well as Central and Northern Hungary. In the capi-
tals of these countries service employment exceeded 250 persons per 1,000 inhabitants. 
Table 6 
Classes of employment structures applied in the typology of territorial units 
Type of structure 
Structure dominated by employ nent in 
industry 
industry 
industry 
industry 
agricultu- 
agricultu-
Gross employment 
and 
and 
agricultu-  re 
re and 
structure 
services 
agricultu-  re and ser- 
services 
re 
vices 
transport- 
transport- 
transport- 
distributi-  distributi-  remaining 
Structure of 
ation 
ation and 
ation and 
on 
on and 
branches 
employment in 
distributi-  remaining 
remaining 
market services 
on 
branches 
branches 
Structure of 
science 
education  education  remaining 
employment 
and 
and 
and 
branches 
in socio-cultural 
education  health 
remaining 
and civil services 
service 
branches 
Shares of employes 
Classes of shares 
in: 
Service sector 
to 25% 
25-30% 
above 30% 
Service sector 
to 150 persons 
150-200 persons 
above 200 persons 
per 1000 inhabitants 
In some countries or their parts very low values of service employment related to the 
population resulted from their general level of economic development, which found its 
reflection mainly in an underdevelopment of the socio-cultural and civil services. The 
level of development of the market services in these countries was much less diversified 
and particular countries were much more homogeneous in this respect. Apart from the 

Andrzej Werwicki : Tertiary Employment in Some Central European Countries about 1980. 
In: Spatial Research and the Social-Political Changes. Pécs: Centre for Regional Studies, 
1993. 67-84. p. Discussion Papers. Special
84 
ANDRZEJ WERWICKI 
GDR and Czechoslovakia where the number of employees in market services exceeded 
usually 100 persons per 1,000 inhabitants, i.e. exceeded the mean value for the five coun-
tries; in other countries such values were characteristic only of capitals, highly urbanized 
regions and seaports. Very low values, below 80 persons per 1,000 inhabitants, were typi-
cal of the agricultural areas of Poland and Romania as well as of neighbouring big cities 
functioning as their hinterlands. Employment in the sphere of socio-cultural and civil ser-
vices in the whole of the GDR and Czechoslovakia also exceeded the international mean. 
In general, it exceeded 80 persons per 1,000 inhabitants. In the other countries such num-
bers appeared only in capitals or, sometimes (Poland), also in territorial units containing 
big cities—important centres of scientific and cultural activities. Other metropolitan re-
gions as well as recreation areas in Poland and Hungary had numbers close to the mean. 
The remaining territories of the last mentioned countries and almost half of the units in 
Romania had relatively low indices of employment in the socio-cultural and civil services 
(40 to 60 persons per 1,000 inhabitants). The other half of Romania, Eastern and Southern 
part of the country, had extremely low employment in the discussed sphere (less than 40 
persons per 1,000 inhabitants). Equally low indices in Poland appeared only in three units. 
Each analysis so far carried out indicates that the general level of development of the 
service sector measured by means of employment, was the highest in the GDR and Cze-
choslovakia, the countries with the most developed economies, which were also spared 
such war devastations as those suffered by Poland. The level of development of the ser-
vice sector in Romania was the lowest among the five countries. Poland and Hungary held 
an intermediate position and were typical in the parallel existence of both units with de-
veloped services and with their deficits. 
REFERENCES 
BORCHERT, J. G. 1980: Geographie van de tertiaire sector (The geography of the tertiary sector) — Utrecht 
NOWOSIELSKA, E. 1972: Zn5tnicowanie popytu i podaty uslug w ukladzie wojew6dzkim (Differentiation of 
the demand on and the supply of services in the voivodship pattern) — Biuletyn KPZK PAN, 73 — 
Warszawa 
. WERWICKI, A. 1982: Geografia uslug funkcjonalnego makmregionu Warszawy. Zalotenia badawcze (Geo-
graphy of services in the functional macroregion of Warsaw. Research assumptions) — Biul. Inf. 
1GiPZ PAN, 38 — Warszawa — pp.133-148. 
WERWICKI, A. 1987: Geografia uslug makroregionu funkcjalnego Warszawy (Geography of services in the 
macroregion of Warsaw) — Dokumentacja Geograficzna, 1, p.92 
STATISTICAL SOURCES 
Czechoslovakia: 
Statisticka Rocenka, 1982 
GDR: 
Statistisches Jahrbuch, 1982 
Hungary: 
Evi Nepszamlalgs, 1980 
Tertileti Statisztikai Evkonyv, 1981 
Poland: 
Rocznik Statystyczny GUS, 1980 and 1981 
Romania: 
Population census of Romania in 1977. Tabel: Recensamintue populatici si la locuitorilor 
1977 (Active population by judetes)