Transcript

The EconomyBy Mapaseka Ayanda Dube

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What is the knowledge economy?

• Knowledge has become the main resource• The pace of innovation is accelerating

(not only in products and services, but also in processes, markets, sourcing, business models, etc.)

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Capital

Knowledge

Land

Labor

Agricultural age

Industrial age

Knowledge age

Are terms like Knowledge “Economy” and “Information Society” useful? For what? Views vary ...

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All sound and fury - not really much serious

change

All sound and fury - not really much serious

change

A lot of action, but no strong common

themes, no central axis for a new social

formation

A lot of action, but no strong common

themes, no central axis for a new social

formation

A lot of action, but the ground-rules stay the

same

A lot of action, but the ground-rules stay the

same

A lot of change, some fundamentals are

shifting

A lot of change, some fundamentals are

shifting

A lot of change, shaking the foundations of institutional

structures

A lot of change, shaking the foundations of institutional

structures

Immense change in the nature of societies – value creation,

equality, power, leadership, etc…

Immense change in the nature of societies – value creation,

equality, power, leadership, etc…

UniversalThings like….

- Laws of Nature

- Essential

natures of things

- Mathematical and logical theorems

Plato

Key Features

•Information Society •Knowledge Economy

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TECHNOLOGICAL

1)Hard to differentiate; so common list:

Internet; computers, comm standards, e-devices; cross-discipline techs,

2) Diffusion of tech from large institutions to individuals, empowerment: Internet – user-generated content and software

3) IS – advent of computers; KIS: mode 2; biotechnologies

• Limited supply

• Unlimited demand

• Law of demand and supply

• Market mechanism of coordination & ownership

• Price takers vs. price makers

Figure: Craven, John (1990): Introduction to Economics, p.61

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TRADITIONAL ECONOMY

Supply, Demand & Equilibrium

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Knowledge has different properties

• Low rivalry (usually said non-rivalry)Use by one person does not diminish it

• Low excludability (usually said partial excludability)It is difficult to prevent others from using it

• Knowledge is both input and outputToday’s innovations feed tomorrow’s

In other words…• Knowledge is an infinite resource• Knowledge tends to spread

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High first-copy costs (Fixed costs)

Low marginal costs

Declining infrastructure costs (processing, storage, bandwidth)

Economies of networks

Abundance rather than scarcity Amazon: 2,3 Mio books Bookshop: 40-100.000 books Figures: compiled by author, based on Stahler (2001): Geschaftsmodelle in der digitalen Okonomie, p.197

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DIGITAL ECONOMY

DIGITAL GOODS HAVE…

Over-supply Increasing storage & processing capacity

at decreasing costs Unlimited “shelf-space” of digital

businesses

Demand Irrational behavior with free products

No cost-benefit analysis at zero price Difficult to map utility No-cost = no disadvantage

Power of competition Webmail: Google & Yahoo

Critical mass crucial9

FREE ECONOMY

CHARACTERISTICS

• Choice under scarcity

• Self interest vs max profit

• Max Utility with limited budget

• Substitute & Income effect influence demand

Figure: Mankiw, N. Gregory and Taylor, Mark P. (2006): Microeconomics: Microeconomics, p.432

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TRADITIONAL ECONOMY

Consumer Behavior

Problems with this “Information Sector” Approach

“Information Occupations” are not the only Information-Processors. They are specialised and visible ... but are they more significant, more sophisticated? Would new IT be used to replace human effort especially here? Problems of Classification:

(a) Boundary Cases(b) Heterogeneity

Periodisation issues – in what way is “information society” (in this view) now a new stage rather than a step in a trend?

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Organizational level• External issues

• Scan the environment (e.g., public policies, S&T development, competitors’ behavior, etc.

• Improve knowledge creation and transfer through collaborative arrangements and acquisitions

• Open channels with customers and society• Internal issues

• Develop absorptive and innovative capacity• Manage knowledge work and workers• Explore contracting and outsourcing alternatives

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Sectoral Workforce skills (educational levels)

Agriculture

Manufacturing

HORECA

Trade Transport

Pub. Admin.

Other Sers.

FIRE

Education

Business Sers._ Health & Soc.

Sers.

HIGH SKILL

LOW SKILL

MEDIUM SKILL

Data on EU workforce, 2000

Knowledge-intensive services

Low-skill services

Medium-skill services

Firms and Sectors

• Society (concept of eco-services, informal economy and self-services)

• Formal Economy (in-house services, plus services delivered to others - sometimes sold - by non-service firms)

• Services Sectors (main activity concept of eco-services)

• Knowledge-Intensive Services• Business-Related Services• Business Services• Knowledge-Intensive Business Services

Firms and Sectors

Society

Formal Economy

Services Sectors

Knowledge-Intensive Services

Business-Related Services

Business Services

Knowledge-Intensive Business Services

Porat’s Picture

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1860 1880 1900 1920 1940 1960 1980

4 sector aggregation of

US workforce

Info

Serv

Mfg

Agr

Agricultural Industrial Information

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Knowledge Economy

• Less of a technological focus….• Less specifically information technology…• Greater reliance on innovation and thus on innovation-

facilitating knowledge in industry – increasing R&D, dependence on hi-tech products and processes

• (Other types of knowledge important too – for innovation and coordination – thus greater share of knowledge workers and use of KIBS)

• Increased investment in knowledge production (=R&D), distribution (=education), management (knowledge management), etc.

References

• Christian Dahlhausen, Dirk Schreiber, Rainer Clement(2008), Free Economy. University of Applied Science

• Ian Miles(2008), Knowledge Economy and Information Society.

• Ian Miles (2009), Knowledge Intensive Service firms, sectors, systems.Centre for Service Research & MIoIR,Manchester Business School

• Katsuhiro Umemoto (2006), The Knowledge Economy and the Knowledge Society.

• Stephen Downes(2007), Future Knowledge Society.

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