Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface
- Techno-Economic Paradigms
- 1 Introduction: Carlota Perez and Evolutionary Economics
- 2 Developing Innovation Capability: Meeting the Policy Challenge
- 3 Slow Food, Slow Growth … Slow ICT: The Vision of Ambient Intelligence
- 4 Technical Change and Structural Inequalities: Converging Approaches to Problems of Underdevelopment
- 5 The New Techno-Economic Paradigm and its Impact on Industrial Structure
- 6 Governance in and of Techno-Economic Paradigm Shifts: Considerations for and from the Nanotechnology Surge
- 7 Innovation Policy and Incentives Structure: Learning from the Mexican Case
- 8 Schumpeter's Business Cycles and Techno-Economic Paradigms
- 9 Asian Innovation Experiences and Latin American Visions: Exploiting Shifts in Techno-Economic Paradigms
- 10 Doing Capitalism: Notes on the Practice of Venture Capitalism (Revised and Extended)
- 11 Small States, Innovation and Techno-Economic Paradigms
- 12 Financial Experimentation, Technological Paradigm Revolutions and Financial Crises
- 13 Why the New Economy is a Learning Economy
- 14 The Art of Macro-Qualitative Modelling: An Exploration of Perez' Sequence Model of Great Surges
- 15 Technology, Institutions and Economic Development
- 16 Techno-Economic Paradigms and the Migration (Relocation) of Industries to the Peripheries
- 17 On the Discreet Charm of the (Rentier) Bourgeoisie: The Contradictory Nature of the Installation Period of a New Techno-Economic Paradigm
- 18 Production-Based Economic Theory and the Stages of Economic Development: From Tacitus to Carlota Perez
- 19 Carlota Perez' Contribution to the Research Programme in Public Management: Understanding and Managing the Process of Creative Destruction in Public Institutions and Organizations
- 20 Carlota Perez – Her Biography and the Origins of her Ideas
- Notes
- Bibliography Carlota Perez
13 - Why the New Economy is a Learning Economy
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 March 2012
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface
- Techno-Economic Paradigms
- 1 Introduction: Carlota Perez and Evolutionary Economics
- 2 Developing Innovation Capability: Meeting the Policy Challenge
- 3 Slow Food, Slow Growth … Slow ICT: The Vision of Ambient Intelligence
- 4 Technical Change and Structural Inequalities: Converging Approaches to Problems of Underdevelopment
- 5 The New Techno-Economic Paradigm and its Impact on Industrial Structure
- 6 Governance in and of Techno-Economic Paradigm Shifts: Considerations for and from the Nanotechnology Surge
- 7 Innovation Policy and Incentives Structure: Learning from the Mexican Case
- 8 Schumpeter's Business Cycles and Techno-Economic Paradigms
- 9 Asian Innovation Experiences and Latin American Visions: Exploiting Shifts in Techno-Economic Paradigms
- 10 Doing Capitalism: Notes on the Practice of Venture Capitalism (Revised and Extended)
- 11 Small States, Innovation and Techno-Economic Paradigms
- 12 Financial Experimentation, Technological Paradigm Revolutions and Financial Crises
- 13 Why the New Economy is a Learning Economy
- 14 The Art of Macro-Qualitative Modelling: An Exploration of Perez' Sequence Model of Great Surges
- 15 Technology, Institutions and Economic Development
- 16 Techno-Economic Paradigms and the Migration (Relocation) of Industries to the Peripheries
- 17 On the Discreet Charm of the (Rentier) Bourgeoisie: The Contradictory Nature of the Installation Period of a New Techno-Economic Paradigm
- 18 Production-Based Economic Theory and the Stages of Economic Development: From Tacitus to Carlota Perez
- 19 Carlota Perez' Contribution to the Research Programme in Public Management: Understanding and Managing the Process of Creative Destruction in Public Institutions and Organizations
- 20 Carlota Perez – Her Biography and the Origins of her Ideas
- Notes
- Bibliography Carlota Perez
Summary
Foreword and Postscript
When I was invited to give a contribution to the Festschrift for Carlota Perez, I proposed that my contribution should be based upon a paper on ‘the new economy’ and its crisis that I started to draft before Christopher Freeman's 80th birthday, September 2001. This choice was quite natural, since the original paper was written in honour of both Chris Freeman and Carlota Perez. In the light of the current crisis, this choice of an ‘old paper’ has become even more appropriate. Much of the argument in the paper relating to the ICT bubble is highly relevant also for the current crisis. I have therefore decided to leave the text in its original shape while adding this postscript as a foreword.
The basic message in the paper is that while Information and Communication Technologies (ICT) offer a great potential for productivity growth, it was naïve to assume that it could bolster permanent high rates of noninflationary economic growth. What Greenspan and others neglected was the central insight in Carlota Perez’ work that the productivity potential can be fully exploited only after a sequence of radical institutional changes. The institutional changes that did take place – the weakening of trade unions, the deregulation of financial markets, the increased used of share options and, in general, the increased freedom for capitalists to move capital across borders and to change the form of capital through leveraging – was highly biased and it certainly did not establish a framework supportive for technical, organizational and institutional learning.
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- Techno-Economic ParadigmsEssays in Honour of Carlota Perez, pp. 221 - 238Publisher: Anthem PressPrint publication year: 2009
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