Description A knowledge economy features a highly
skilled workforce within both
microeconomic and
macroeconomic environment. Institutions and industries create employment opportunities that necessitate highly
specialized skills to satisfy the demands of the
global market. In principle, an individual's primary
capital is constituted by knowledge, together with the ability to perform and to generate
economic value. In a knowledge economy, highly skilled jobs require excellent technical skills and
relational skills such as
problem-solving, the flexibility to interface with
multiple discipline areas as well as the ability to adapt to changes as opposed to moving or
crafting
physical objects in conventional
manufacturing-based economies. A knowledge economy stands in contrast to an
agrarian economy, in which the primary economic activity is
subsistence farming for which the main requirement is
manual labour or an
industrialized economy that features
mass production in which most of the workers are relatively
unskilled. A knowledge economy emphasizes the importance of skills in a
service economy, the third phase of economic development also called a
post-industrial economy. It is related to an
information economy, which emphasizes the importance of information as non-physical capital, and a
digital economy, which emphasizes the degree to which
information technology facilitates trade. For companies, intellectual property such as
trade secrets,
copyrighted material, and
patented processes become more valuable in a knowledge economy than in earlier eras. The global economy's transition to a knowledge economy is also referred to as the
Information Age, bringing about an
information society. The term
knowledge economy was made famous by
Peter Drucker as the title of Chapter 12 in his book
The Age of Discontinuity (1969), which Drucker attributed to economist
Fritz Machlup in 1962, originating in the idea of
scientific management developed by
Frederick Winslow Taylor.
Knowledge-based economy and human capital In a knowledge economy, human intelligence is the key engine of economic development. It is an economy where members acquire, create, disseminate and apply knowledge to facilitate economic and social development. An economic system that is not knowledge-based is considered to be inconceivable. It describes the process of
consumption and production activities that are satisfied from the application of workers' expertise -
intellectual capital and typically represents a significant level of individual
economic activities in modern
developed economies through building an interconnected and advanced global economy where sources of knowledge are the critical contributors. The present concept of "knowledge" originates from the
historical and
philosophical studies by
Gilbert Ryle and
Israel Scheffler, who conducted knowledge to the terms "
procedural knowledge" and "
conceptual Knowledge" and identified two types of skills: "routine competencies or facilities" and "
critical skills" that is intelligent performance; and it's further elaborated by
Lundvall and Johnson who defined "knowledge" as falling in four broad categories: •
Know-what refers to knowledge about facts. Like information, experts utilize know-what to fulfill their jobs, such as with complex occupations such as law and medicine. •
Know-why refers to scientific knowledge of
principles and
laws of motion in nature. It concerns the
theoretical research of scientific and
technological fields, which is essential for allowing innovation in the
production process and products development in areas such as universities and specialized firms. It can also reduce error frequency in trial and error procedures. where he described the difference between the manual workers and the knowledge workers. The manual worker is the one who works with their own hands and produces goods and services. In contrast, the knowledge worker works with their head rather than hands and produces ideas, knowledge, and information. ==Information versus knowledge==