Intellectual and cultural developments Some precursors to technocratic thought are found in
ancient philosophy. In
ancient Greece,
Plato () characterized politics as a an art or craft with a specific goal, comparable to other expert practices such as medicine. He argued that political skill and knowledge of
human nature are essential to just and prudent leadership. He regarded rule by wise
philosopher-kings as the ideal form of governance. In
ancient China, some technocratic principles are reflected in
Confucianism, which arose in the 6th or 5th century BCE. They include the elitist view that the most virtuous and capable should rule. Beginning in the 7th century CE, this tradition also saw the emergence of a rigorous, merit-based
examination system designed to select the most competent candidates for government service. is sometimes regarded as the "father of technocracy" because of his idea of a new kind of society based on scientific rationality. In the 16th and 17th centuries, the
Scientific Revolution established a new paradigm of rational inquiry in which truth is not passively revealed but actively discovered by following the
scientific method and seeking
empirical evidence. During the subsequent
Age of Enlightenment in the late 17th and 18th centuries, Enlightenment thinkers emphasized
reason, science, and technical rationality. They promoted the pursuit of knowledge and challenged traditional authorities. This cultural and intellectual movement shaped the
French Revolution, which introduced several technocratic principles into governance. It advanced programs of social engineering and recast political authority around meritocratic expertise. The growing economic complexity during the
Industrial Revolution in the late 18th and 19th centuries further accelerated the demand for specialized knowledge and expert-led management. These developments also influenced political thought.
Francis Bacon (1561–1626) envisioned a technocratic
utopia in his
New Atlantis. Unlike Plato, he argued that empirical scientists, rather than philosopher-kings, should rule. For Bacon, politics should take the form of scientific administration, with scientific elites as benevolent rulers promoting the general interest of the whole.
Jeremy Bentham's (1748–1832)
utilitarianism also influenced technocratic thought, particularly the idea that governance should maximize overall welfare, laying the groundwork for
cost-benefit analysis in public administration. In his novel
Looking Backward,
Edward Bellamy (1850–1898) reached a mass audience with his utopian vision of technocracy in which technology is harnessed to ensure abundance, leisure, and peace for all citizens.
Henry Gantt (1861–1919), an associate of Taylor, sought to extend these ideas into the political realm. He proposed a "new democracy" that grounds governance in scientific facts. For him, the degree of an individual's political authority should correspond to their ability and willingness to advance the common good. His outlook was also influenced by
Thorstein Veblen (1857–1929), who criticized
capitalism for introducing conflicts of interest that hinder the public good. He argued that a system run by engineers and technicians could better serve common prosperity.
Max Weber (1864–1920) explored the role of
instrumental rationality in modern society. He argued that the pervasiveness of scientific and technical reason is a key feature of
modernity, emphasizing the importance of mathematical and scientific knowledge and the increasing reliance on trained experts and managers to organize social life. During the two
World Wars, technocratic principles were implemented to gain military and economic advantages by increasing productivity and efficiency. This happened in several fields, including the
weapons industry,
logistics, and mobilization of the workforce. In the book
The Managerial Revolution,
James Burnham (1905–1987) grounded technocratic principles in a sociological analysis of the growing role of managers and technical experts in modern
industrial societies.
John Kenneth Galbraith (1908–2006) further explored these ideas in his book
The New Industrial State, arguing that advanced technology requires large corporations, long-term planning, and an extensive network of technical experts. In the book
The Coming of Post-Industrial Society,
Daniel Bell (1919–2011) shifted the focus from industrial to
post-industrial society. He highlighted the importance of technocratic principles as knowledge, science, and
information technologies become the primary drivers of economic growth.
Postmodern thinkers examined the increasing centrality of expert knowledge in modern society.
Michel Foucault (1926–1984) explored how knowledge is used to wield
power over populations through indirect mechanisms embedded in
correctional, medical, and educational institutions.
Jean-François Lyotard (1924–1998) warned of the totalizing and dehumanizing tendencies of technocratic rationality. A different criticism was formulated by the
Frankfurt School theorist
Jürgen Habermas (1929–2026), who regarded technocracy as a threat to democracy, proposing that expert knowledge should be integrated into democratic processes without replacing them. In the 1930s in North America, the
technocracy movement emerged from the
Technical Alliance, which had been founded in 1919 by
Howard Scott (1890–1970). Followers of the technocracy movement applied Veblen's ideas to the
Great Depressiona deep economic crisis that had started in 1929. They argued that this crisis was a symptom of capitalism and proposed a technocratic reorganization of society to overcome it. In addition to the political governance by engineers, scientists, and technical managers, this program aimed to replace the price-based economy with one that organizes distribution and consumption based on energy costs. It sought to increase abundance while reducing average workload through centralized planning, integrating North America into a self-sufficient unit called a
technate. In the post-World War II decades, technocracy influenced U.S. politics by shaping institutional frameworks, particularly in economic and military spheres. Links to politics happened through regulatory and advisory bodies such as the
Atomic Energy Commission, the
National Science Foundation, the
Council of Economic Advisers, and the
RAND Corporation. Various aspects of technocratic governance were also present in the
Soviet Union, such as the centralized economic planning by experts under the
State Planning Committee, established in 1921. These tendencies were particularly prominent during the leadership of
Leonid Brezhnev (1906–1982), who promoted a scientific-technological revolution with an increased reliance on engineers as political leaders. Technocratic tendencies were prominent in Latin America starting in the 1960s and 1970s, both in democratic and authoritarian regimes. They typically took the form of state-led development efforts in sectors such as agriculture, industry, and health, exemplified by the expert-guided reforms in Colombia under the
National Front governments. In subsequent decades, the technocratic agenda in Latin America increasingly centered on the economy. Since the 1970s and 1980s, Singapore saw the establishment of an administrative state focused on rational organization, technical skill, and meritocratic egalitarianism while seeking to avoid ideological polarization and partisan interests. Because of its economic success in the form of rapid development and growth, it is often regarded as a leading exemplar of the advantages of technocracy. Other Asian examples of the implementation of technocratic principles are found in Taiwan, South Korea, and Japan. Beginning in the second half of the 20th century, the formation of the European Union introduced various forms of technocratic governance, such as the establishment of expert-led institutions with little democratic control, including the
European Central Bank. Starting in the 1990s,
evidence-based policy making has become an influential approach in the United Kingdom, seeking to align governance with robust empirical evidence and rigorous scientific evaluation. In the 2000s and 2010s, several EU countries adopted technocratic measures in response to political or economic turmoil, such as technocratic cabinets in Italy and Greece during the
European financial crisis. ==See also== • • • • • • • == References ==