Overview
The most pressing challenge for countries with developing or transitional economies is how to make their economies more innovative, creative, and sustainable. For most politicians and the economists advising them, this problem feels dauntingly complex—every social system is unique and difficult to predict. The path forward is rarely straightforward, and outcomes have long depended heavily on the leaders’ instincts and fortune.
This book presents the theory of pole kinetics—a practical framework guiding countries toward the developed-economy realm. It reveals a profound yet under-explored correlation between a society’s cultural values and the functioning of its social institutions. The theory and its practical applications are rooted in the study of numerous countries during periods of transition—when tangible assets such as land, oil, metals, and industrial equipment gave way to intangible ones, including works of literature, art and design, patents, and brands.
Patterns found at the intersection of economics and culture hold the key to making development manageable, irreversible, and sustainable. These include building reliable measurement systems, dismantling outdated “ritual” institutions, and replacing them with ones that work. The book also addresses the uncomfortable question of why adopting the best international practices has never resulted in a breakthrough for any developing country, and what needs to change. Economic “miracles” are no longer miraculous. This theory gives nations the tools and understanding to achieve them. All that remains is the willpower to act.
The book, Controlled Economic Evolution: Pole Kinetics and the Non-Random Transformation of Modern Formations [Bulk, Wholesale, Quantity] ISBN#9781801360753 in Hardcover by Theo Reks, Endre Birich may be ordered in bulk quantities. Minimum starts at 25 copies. Availability based on publisher status and quantity being ordered.
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