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The Coming of New Industrial State

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The book explores the effect of modern technological shifts on human society, showing that technologies are undergoing qualitative changes that open up new opportunities for personal development an...
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  • 14 November 2023
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The book explores the effect of modern technological shifts on human society, showing that technologies are undergoing accelerating qualitative changes that open up new opportunities for personal development and satisfaction of wants and, simultaneously, engender risks associated with growing opportunities of human interference with nature and technogenic stress on the environment. Based on the study of cutting-edge technologies and resulting socioeconomic shifts, Bodrunov’s analysis outlines the shape of the civilizational crisis we face. It can only be overcome by founding a new industrial society of the second generation (if we consider the new industrial state described by J. K. Galbraith as the first generation) reliant on knowledge intensive material production and the gradual removal of humans from immediate material production.

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Price: $65.00
Pages: 298
Publisher: Academic Studies Press
Imprint: Academic Studies Press
Publication Date: 14 November 2023
Trim Size: 9.21 X 6.14 in
ISBN: 9798887192864
Format: Hardcover
BISACs: Economics of industrial organization, Economic & financial crises & disasters, Economic history, Industry & industrial studies, European history
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“Sergey Bodrunov’s lively book addresses one of the most controversial consequences of liberal globalization—the deindustrialisation of the advanced capitalist states. Following the line of thinking of writers such as Clark Kerr and J.K. Galbraith, Bodrunov insists on the revival of industrialization and in doing so he makes advances on earlier theorizing. He insists that the development of civilization calls for a higher level of material production predicated on human knowledge and he anticipates much of current theorizing about the effects of artificial intelligence. In a provocative discussion, predicated on the experience of post-socialist Russia, he calls for positive economic policies to enhance the capabilities of modern economies to advance to higher levels of industrial development. The book will appeal to readers seeking solutions to modern economic problems through state coordination.”

— David Lane, Emeritus Professor of Sociology, University of Cambridge, UK

Sergey Bodrunov, Doctor of Economics, Professor, Corresponding Member of the Russian Academy of Sciences. Author of more than 1000 scientific works, including more than 35 monographs. President of the Free Economic Society of Russia, President of the International Union of Economists, Director of the S. Y. Witte Institute for New Industrial Development. Author of the New Industrial Society of the Second Generation (NIS.2) concept and the theory of Noonomy. Dr. Bodrunov’s book Noonomy was granted “The Distinguished Achievement Award in Political Economy for the 21 Century” by the World Association for Political Economy (WAPE).

Introduction


Part One: Material Production and Industry: Technology, Labor, and Product

Chapter 1: Production and Its Product: The Industrial Mode of Production

Chapter 2: The Service Industry, Material Production, and Their Correlation in the Modern Economy


Part Two: The Russian Economic System and (De)industrialization

Chapter 3: Industrialization of the Economy as a Factor of Social Development; The Phenomenon of Modern Deindustrialization

Chapter 4: Industrial Development in Russia: Lessons from the Past

Chapter 5: The Deindustrialization of Russia and the Challenges of Reindustrialization

Chapter 6: Techno-Economic Paradigms and the Renewal of the Russian Economy: The Political-Economic Aspect

Chapter 7: The Russian Economic System: The Future of High-Tech Industrial Production


Part Three: The New Industrial State v.2

Chapter 8: The New Industrial State of the Twentieth Century

Chapter 9: The New Industrial State v.2: The Parameters of its Genesis


Part Four: Reindustrialization, Import Substitution, and Active Industrial Policy

Chapter 10: Technological Leadership and National Security

Chapter 11: Innovative Economic Development: Into NIS.2

Chapter 12: Industrial Policy as a Tool of Reindustrialization and Import Substitution

Chapter 13: Imperatives, Opportunities, and Challenges of Reindustrialization

Chapter 14: The Revival of Production, Science, and Education: The Primary Priority of Modern Industrial Policy

Chapter 15: NIS.2 as a Social System


Conclusion