The emergence of the
post-industrial society has instigated significant cultural changes. In the
United States,
Canada,
Western Europe, and a growing proportion of
East Asia, the vast majority of the people are no longer employed in factories, but work in the
service sector instead. There has been a transition from a mechanical environment to one where more people spend more of their time dealing with other individuals, symbols, and
information, thus workers in the knowledge sector need to exercise their own judgment and decision-making abilities. This transition has had significant outcomes: • This transition has led to historically high levels of prosperity and welfare states that offer food, clothing, shelter, housing, education, and healthcare to almost everyone. Even in the United States, where the
welfare state is relatively limited, the government still significantly redistributes part of the
GDP. This creates a scenario where the people in respective societies start taking physical survival, minimum living standards, and nearly 80 years of average life expectancy for granted. This further motivates them to pursue goals beyond mere survival. • Contemporary service-oriented occupations demand the use of
cognitive skills. Engineers, teachers, lawyers, accountants, counselors, programmers, and analysts all fall under the category of
creative class. Despite sometimes working in hierarchical organizations, creative professionals have a considerable degree of autonomy in their work. The demand for cognitive skills is significantly higher than that in societies during the early stages of industrialisation. In order to meet these demands, the workforces in post-industrial societies are increasingly pursuing higher education, with a focus on creativity, imagination, and intellectual independence. • Post-industrial societies tend to be more socially liberal than those that preceded them. The centrally controlled, highly regimented workforces of the industrial world have disappeared, along with the strong
conformity pressures that came with them. The traditional system, in which children depend on their parents to survive, in return for which they are expected to take care of their parents in old age, has been weakened by the welfare state. As a result, close-knit family structures, once a survival necessity, are now increasingly a matter of choice, replacing 'communities of necessity' with 'elective affinities'. The destandardisation of economic activities and social life reduces social constraints in unprecedented ways. Therefore, the transition in post-industrial societies is largely characterised by liberation from authority. ==Self-expression values and democracy==