EBOOK

Pursuing the Knowledge Economy

A Sympathetic History of High-Skill, High-Wage Hubris

Nick O'DonovanSeries: Building Progressive Alternatives
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Year
2022
Language
English

About

In the 1990s, the “knowledge economy” was hailed by policy-makers in developed democracies as an antidote to the anxieties arising from the era of market liberalization – an era characterized by the decline of skilled blue-collar work, increasing levels of social exclusion and widening regional inequality. The shift to knowledge-driven growth appeared to offer policymakers a way of harnessing technological progress and global economic integration for progressive purposes, and justifying progressive policies in terms of the economic benefits that they would produce.


Nick O’Donovan tells the story of how the techno-optimism once associated with the rise of the knowledge economy came to be supplanted by widespread anxiety about technological progress, and how the political consensus that formed around a knowledge-driven growth agenda has unravelled, paving the way for the electoral upheavals experienced by many developed democracies in recent years. By examining the rhetoric and reality of knowledge-driven growth over the last three decades, the book highlights the flawed assumptions underpinning this policy agenda, showing how its economic shortcomings map on to patterns of political discontent evident today. It assesses whether there is scope for rebooting this policy agenda in the wake of the Covid-19 pandemic, or whether politicians will need to reach beyond it if they are to deliver inclusive prosperity and equitable growth in the future.

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Reviews

"An interesting evaluation of the policy consensus of the 1990s and early 2000s concerning the opportunities afforded by digital technology and globalisation … traces the historical evolution of the ideas … and the way the financial crisis torpedoed any optimism about new opportunities to upskill the workforce and create satisfying new jobs."
Diane Coyle, enlightenmenteconomics.com
"Ranging widely across politics and economics in lively and highly-accessible prose, this book provides one of the best guides we have to the promise and pitfalls of the knowledge economy - the defining economic development of our time. With discerning judgement and a magisterial command of the subject, it offers an antidote to techno-optimism as well as important recommendations for the future."
Peter A. Hall, Krupp Foundation Professor of European Studies, Harvard University
"For decades 'the knowledge economy' has been the goal of every left or right centrist democratic government, but as this succinct eye-opener of a book shows, while cadres of the highly skilled, owners of rents and intellectual property, possessors of monopolistic platforms and superstars hoovered up all the growth, the rest dropped back in earnings and status. The pandemic has demonstrated how we
Polly Toynbee, columnist, The Guardian

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