Fort Myers, Florida Sep 18, 2025 (Issuewire.com) - This report compares industries that create long-term wealth by producing capital goods and intellectual property, versus those that primarily provide services that redistribute or consume wealth. Based on 2024 estimates, roughly 48% of U.S. GDP comes from wealth-creating industries, while 52% is service-based cost industries.
Economists often divide economic activity into wealth-creating industries (where something tangible or lasting is produced, adding to national capital) versus service-providing sectors (which circulate or consume wealth but dont necessarily expand the stock of assets). Heres a breakdown with estimates:
Industries That Primarily Create Wealth
These sectors convert raw materials, labor, and innovation into physical assets or intellectual property that endure beyond immediate consumption.
Industries That Primarily Provide Services
These sectors support, facilitate, or redistribute wealth but dont usually create new capital assets.
Summary:
A nations long-term prosperity depends on the balance: if service sectors expand while wealth-creating sectors shrink (as has happened in the U.S. since the 1970s), debt grows, and real wealth declines.GDP Share by Sector See Bar Chart
The bar chart below highlights the relative GDP share of each primary industry sector in 2024. The diagram illustrates the estimated 2024 distribution of U.S. GDP across major sectors. Healthcare and Construction/Real Estate are the most significant contributors, together making up over one-third of the total economy. Government and Technology/IP also hold strong shares. By contrast, traditional wealth-creating industries like Manufacturing, Agriculture, and Mining make up a smaller percentage. This highlights the U.S. shift toward a service-driven economy.
Change of GDP From 1965 to 2024 See Chart
U.S. GDP Distribution: Wealth-Creating vs. Service-Based Industries
The chart compares the composition of the U.S. economy in 1965 and the 2024 estimate, highlighting the shift from wealth-creating industries (manufacturing, agriculture, energy, construction, technology) to service-based sectors (healthcare, finance, government, education, tourism).
Interpretation:
This transition signifies the U.S. economys increasing reliance on service-oriented sectors. While services provide employment and social value, they are less directly tied to wealth creation in terms of producing durable, exportable, and capital-building goods. The trend raises concerns about long-term economic sustainability, trade balances, and national competitiveness.
Key Observations Shift from Manufacturing to Healthcare Industry See Chart
This chart tracks the share of U.S. GDP held by Manufacturing and Healthcare from 1980 to 2019. It highlights one of the most significant structural shifts in the U.S. economy over the past four decades: the steady decline of manufacturing and the simultaneous rise of healthcare.
Basically, only two industriesManufacturing and Healthcarehave dramatically shifted in GDP share. Manufacturing has fallen from a dominant role in 1965 (about one-quarter of GDP) to just 11% in 2024, while Healthcare expanded from a modest 5% in 1965 to nearly one-fifth of the economy today. This reversal underscores Americas transition from a wealth-creating, production-based economy toward a service-heavy, healthcare-dominated system.
Overall, between 1965 and 2024, the healthcare industry grew by approximately 14 percentage points, while the manufacturing industry lost about 13 percentage points of its GDP share.
U.S. National Debt and Economic Shifts See Chart
Key Observations
This chart illustrates the growth of U.S. national debt from 1985 to 2024. The debt has surged from under $2 trillion in the mid-1980s to over $37 trillion by 2024. The rise is not linearit accelerates after 2005, with especially sharp increases after 2015.
Conclusion
The evidence suggests that as healthcares share of the economy increased, the national debt also rose sharply. Healthcare, while essential, is largely service-based and does not generate the same durable wealth as manufacturing. To stabilize the economy and contrl debt growth, the U.S. needs to revitalize manufacturing and other wealth-creating industries.
Conclusion and Policy Recommendations
Unless decisive action is taken to enforce the nations tax laws and antitrust laws within the healthcare industry, the United States faces a future of escalating economic and social instability. The unchecked growth of monopolistic hospital systems and insurance conglomerates, coupled with systematic abuse of contractual adjustments and hidden financial arrangements, continues to erode transparency, suppress competition, and deny the Treasury billions in legally owed revenues.
If these practices remain unchallenged, healthcare will consume an ever-larger share of GDP, families will face unsustainable medical debt, and the widening gap between healthcare costs and household incomes will accelerate the erosion of Americas middle class. Over time, this imbalance risks undermining national competitiveness, increasing reliance on government subsidies, and contributing directly to rising federal deficits and long-term debt.
Policy Recommendations
Final Outlook
Without these interventions, the U.S. risks a future in which the healthcare sector becomes a permanent drain on national wealth, enriching a small group of corporate stakeholders while impoverishing families, destabilizing public finances, and eroding the nations democratic foundation. Enforcing the tax code and antitrust statutes as written is not just a legal obligation it is a moral imperative necessary to restore fairness, accountability, and long-term economic stability.
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Source :Roy J. Meidinger
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