Three-Sector Model of Economy

The three-sector model is a way to divide the economy into three main parts based on the type of work people do:

  • Primary Sector → Raw materials
  • Secondary Sector → Manufacturing
  • Tertiary Sector → Services

This model was developed by economists like Allan Fisher, Colin Clark, and Jean Fourastié.


How the Economy is Divided

1. Primary Sector (Extraction of Resources)

  • This sector involves taking natural resources from the Earth
  • Examples:
    • Farming
    • Mining
    • Fishing

👉 It provides raw materials for other sectors


2. Secondary Sector (Manufacturing)

  • This sector converts raw materials into finished goods
  • Examples:
    • Making cars from steel
    • Making clothes from cotton

👉 It adds value to raw materials


3. Tertiary Sector (Services)

  • This sector provides services instead of goods
  • Examples:
    • Transport
    • Banking
    • Retail shops

👉 It helps in selling and distributing goods


How Economies Develop Over Time

According to this model, as a country develops, its economy shifts from one sector to another:

Stage 1: Early Stage (Poor Countries)

  • Most people work in the primary sector
  • Economy depends on agriculture and natural resources

Stage 2: Developing Stage

  • Growth of manufacturing (secondary sector)
  • People move from farming to factories
  • Industrialisation increases

Stage 3: Developed Stage (Rich Countries)

  • Most people work in the tertiary (service) sector
  • Focus on services like banking, education, IT

👉 This shift is called structural transformation


Workforce Distribution (According to Fourastié)

1. Traditional Stage

  • Primary: 64.5%
  • Secondary: 20%
  • Tertiary: 15.5%

👉 Mostly agriculture-based economy


2. Transitional Stage

  • Primary: 40%
  • Secondary: 40%
  • Tertiary: 20%

👉 Industrial growth begins


3. Modern Stage

  • Primary: 10%
  • Secondary: 20%
  • Tertiary: 70%

👉 Service sector dominates


Modern Changes in the Economy

With time, economists felt that the three-sector model is not enough.

New Sectors Added:

4. Quaternary Sector (Knowledge Sector)

  • Deals with information and knowledge
  • Examples:
    • IT services
    • Research
    • Education

5. Quinary Sector (Top-Level Services)

  • Deals with decision-making and high-level services
  • Examples:
    • Government leaders
    • CEOs
    • Top professionals

👉 These are often called “gold collar jobs”


Important Concept: Value Added

  • Value added means the increase in value at each stage of production
  • Example:
    • Raw cotton → cloth → shirt
  • Each step increases value

👉 This concept is important in national income calculation


Limitations of the Model

The three-sector model has some problems:

  • It does not fully fit the modern digital economy
  • It assumed:
    • No unemployment in services (which is not true)
    • High equality (which did not happen)
  • Technology (like computers) changed how services work

👉 So, the model is sometimes considered less accurate today


Conclusion

The three-sector model helps us understand how economies develop:

  • Start with agriculture (primary)
  • Move to industries (secondary)
  • Finally focus on services (tertiary)

Today, modern economies also depend heavily on knowledge and decision-making sectors, making the system more complex than before.