Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
/
Post-industrial economics: Studying human action in an age of intangibles
Post-industrial economics: Studying human action in an age of intangibles
Jan 17, 2026 9:02 AM

As pletes its transition into the Age of Information, economists are struggling to identify the drivers and develop their predictive models accordingly.

Alas, as businesses continue to grow and evolve more rapidly, and as the corresponding systems continue to increase plexity, many economists still view individuals and businesses as mostly static and reactionary.

“Mainstream economists treat the firm as if it were an inorganic particle that does nothing but react to forces around it,” writes economist Arnold Kling in National Affairs. “But the increased importance of intangible factors has turned the world of business into plex ecosystem, one that is capable of changing faster than biological systems, because of the faster pace of human cultural evolution.”

According to Kling, much of the science remains woefully stuck in the past, failing to fully align to our new reality and the uncertainty of what’s e. “We must look away from accepted models and examine the world itself,” he says.

Whereas the economics of yore was primarily concerned with tangible inputs like labor and capital, the economics of the present and future ought to be concerned with intangible factors such as human creativity, brand recognition, collective intelligence, property rights, “informal” intellectual property, social trust, social norms, and so on.

Without a wider imagination and a clearer focus, economists will increasingly struggle to make sense of the world.

“To properly study the economy of the post-industrial era, economists must change the way they treat the individual, the firm, and position of overall economic activity,” Kling explains. “Consumer well-being can no longer be measured by the cost of a particular basket of goods. The strategy of a firm is no longer described as capital accumulation and resource deployment. The economy is no longer straightforwardly quantifiable with inputs and outputs; it is driven by services, skills, coordination, and information — intangible factors — that must be monetized in creative ways.”

Referencing his own book, Invisible Wealth: The Hidden Story of How Markets Work(which I highly mend), Kling also points to the work of Jonathan Haskel and Stian Westlake, whose book, Capitalism without Capital,focuses on the growing significance of intangible value and investment.

To distill their overall point, Haskel and Westlake emphasize what they call the “four Ss”— “sunk costs, spillovers, scalability, and synergies”— which Kling aptly summarizes as follows:

Sunk costs look very different when discussing investment in intangible goods as opposed to physical products…If pany spends hundreds of millions of dollars on research to develop a new drug, and then the drug does not make it to the market, the entire research effort must be written off.Allthe costs will be sunk.

The second “S,” spillovers, refers to the ways in which ideas can be copied for free. For the economy as a whole, spillovers provide a benefit. But for an individual firm trying to profit from its ideas, spillovers are a problem…

Scalability refers to the fact that intangible assets are often not subject to diminishing returns. If a car manufacturer wanted to manufacture more cars, it would be necessary to build more manufacturing plants. But someone who developed an app for smartphones could make it available to an unlimited number of customers without expending additional resources.

Finally, synergies reflect the reality that ideas bination may be much more valuable than ideas considered individually. The value of a smartphone, for instance, is much greater than the value of each of its ponents.

As an economist, Kling is understandably focused on a particular set of intangibles, and the practical tweaks he suggests offer a wide range of healthy challengesto the status quo.

But for Christians, and particularly for Christianeconomists—from the academic researcher to the everyday observer—the broader developments in the modern economy invite us to think even farther beyond the typical “neoclassical” constraints.

How, for instance, do we investigate the forces that Kling points to—creativity, trust, property rights—and connect them to the other social-moral-spiritual dynamics we see across economic life? Further, how do we not just observe the ever-shifting realities and mysteries of modern business strategy, but in doing so, how do improve our clarity of vision and refine our ability to shape them, accordingly?

Regardless, whether we’re studying shifts in business strategies or assessing the future of the broader economy and marketplace, we have the opportunity to adapt our imaginations to a new reality and see our peculiar abundance with fresh, discerning eyes.

Image: post industrial, Rudolf Getel (CC BY 2.0)

Comments
Welcome to mreligion comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
Should We Simply Give Cash to the Poor?
Why do people live in poverty? Sometimes the problem is structural, and the cause can be attributed to a corrupt government or economic injustice. Sometimes the problem is individual, and the cause can be attributed to poor work ethic or a dependency on drugs. Sometimes, perhaps even most of the time, the problem is bination of structural and individual reasons. Just as there is no one cause of poverty there can be no one solution to poverty. Forgetting this obvious...
Obamacare’s Bait and Switch
When a business advertises a particular product in a particular way but secretly delivers something different, it’s considered fraud. When a government agency advertises a particular product in a particular way but secretly delivers something different, it’s considered . . . what, a necessary evil? Huffington Post’s Jason Cherkis spent two days at the Kentucky State Fair with workers from Kynect, the state’s health marketplace. A middle-aged man in a red golf shirt shuffles up to a small folding table...
Christians in Syria Fear ‘Ethnic Cleansing’
As the civil war in Syrian continues to escalate, Christians are increasingly ing the target of violent attacks. Catholic and Orthodox groups in Syria say the anti-government rebels mitted “awful acts” against Christians, including beheadings, rapes and murders of pregnant women. Today, the conflict has morphed into a full-fledged civil war in which more than 100,000 people have perished. The most capable units on the rebel side — those spearheading the fight against the secular government — posed of Islamist...
Obamacare: Driving Up Costs And Driving Down Those Insured
Delta Airlines has announced that it foresees a spike in health care costs for pany to the tune of $100 million a year. A Delta executive, Robert Kight, has said that fees associated with Obamacare will be costly, but won’t likely be more beneficial than what pany’s employees now have. One of the costly items pertains to an annual fee of $63 per “covered participant” next year. pany estimates this means a more than $10 million expense in 2014. The...
Samuel Gregg: Reduced Freedoms? A Review Of ‘Becoming Europe’
ing Europe, the latest book from Acton’s Director of Research Samuel Gregg, has been reviewed by Books & Culture: A Christian Review. Theodore Roosevelt Malloch, a research professor at Yale University’s Center for Faith & Culture, begins his review with a series of question, including, “Will entrepreneurship vanish in America, as it has, more or less, in Europe? And what will be the moral and political costs of what Gregg describes as ‘reduced freedoms’?” Malloch notes how Gregg walks the...
The Blessed Business of Beer
A recent story from Catholic News Service highlights an interesting encounter between markets and monasticism, a subject that I mented on before, this time centered around the Monastery of St. Benedict in Norcia: The monks in Norcia initially were known for their liturgical ministry, particularly sharing their chanted prayers in Latin online – – with people around the world. But following the Rule of St. Benedict means both prayer and manual labor, with a strong emphasis on the monks earning...
Obamacare: Elitist And Inefficient
NRO’s Mark Steyn minces no words when es to his distaste for Obamacare: “a hierarchy of privileges,” he calls it, along with “crappy” and “inefficient.” First, Steyn points out that it’s doubtful anyone has read the prehensive” health care act: it’s a thousand pages long. As he says, the problem with something so prehensive” is that “when everything’s in it, nothing’s in it.” But worst of all, it means whatever the government wants it to mean: The Affordable Care Act...
New Mexico Supreme Court: ‘All Of Us Must Compromise’
The New Mexico Supreme Court, in a ruling regarding a Christian photographer who declined to photograph mitment ceremony of a same-sex couple, stated that this violated the state’s Human Rights Act. In 2006, Elane Huguenin, a professional photographer, was asked to photograph the ceremony of a lesbian couple. Huguenin declined, citing her religious beliefs, and subsequently had plaint filed against her with the New Mexico Human Rights Commission. She was found guilty of discrimination and fined. Justice Richard Bosson, in...
The Reason Markets Fix Mistakes
Pro-market advocates often talk about how markets are self-correcting. But why do businesses in free markets fix their own mistakes? Because if they don’t, customers and other stakeholders will punish them: Lululemon, which produces yoga and other athletic apparel, provoked outrage from its devoted customer base when it released a flawed product earlier this year: see-through yoga pants. Founded in 1998, pany had built trust and loyalty among its yoga-loving clientele for delivering quality products: In just 15 years, Lululemon...
A ‘Golden’ Opportunity for GM Foods
A piece of news analysis over the weekend by Amy Harmon, a national correspondent for the New York Times, captures well the dynamics of the current debates about the merits of genetically-modified organisms (GMO’s). Harmon writes specifically about the case of Golden Rice, which has some attributes that should inoculate it mon concerns about GMO’s. Golden Rice is not monopolized by a corporate entity, and has been developed specifically to address urgent health concerns in the developing world: Not owned...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2026 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved