
BOOKS - HISTORY - Beyond The Market Designing Nonmarket Accounts For The United State...

Beyond The Market Designing Nonmarket Accounts For The United States
Author: Katharine G. Abraham
Year: 2005
Pages: 226
Format: PDF
File size: 5 MB
Language: ENG

Year: 2005
Pages: 226
Format: PDF
File size: 5 MB
Language: ENG

Beyond The Market Designing Nonmarket Accounts For The United States The book "Beyond The Market Designing Nonmarket Accounts For The United States" presents a unique perspective on the role of technology in shaping our society and the importance of understanding its evolution to ensure the survival of humanity. The author argues that the traditional market-based approach to innovation is no longer sufficient to address the complex challenges we face today, and instead, we need to develop a personal paradigm for perceiving the technological process of developing modern knowledge. This paradigm should be based on the need to study and understand the process of technology evolution, as well as the need and possibility of developing a personal paradigm for perceiving the technological process of developing modern knowledge as the basis for the survival of humanity and the survival of the unification of people in a warring state. The book begins by highlighting the limitations of the traditional market-based approach to innovation, which focuses solely on economic growth and profit maximization without considering the broader social and environmental implications. The author contends that this approach has led to the concentration of wealth and power among a select few, leaving behind the majority of the population who are struggling to make ends meet. To address these issues, the book proposes a shift towards a more inclusive and sustainable model of innovation that prioritizes the well-being of all individuals and the planet. To achieve this goal, the book advocates for the development of nonmarket accounts, which are alternative forms of accounting that go beyond the traditional market-based metrics of success. These accounts would consider factors such as social and environmental impact, ethical considerations, and the long-term sustainability of technologies.
''
