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Technocracy

Technocracy is a form of government in which the decision-makers are selected based on their expertise in a given area of responsibility, particularly with regard to scientific or technical knowledge. This system explicitly contrasts with representative democracy, the notion that elected representatives should be the primary decision-makers in government,[1] though it does not necessarily imply eliminating elected representatives. Decision-makers are selected based on specialized knowledge and performance rather than political affiliations, parliamentary skills, or popularity.[2]

The term technocracy was initially used to signify the application of the scientific method to solving social problems. In its most extreme form, technocracy is an entire government running as a technical or engineering problem and is mostly hypothetical. In more practical use, technocracy is any portion of a bureaucracy run by technologists. A government in which elected officials appoint experts and professionals to administer individual government functions, and recommend legislation, can be considered technocratic.[3][4] Some uses of the word refer to a form of meritocracy, where the ablest are in charge, ostensibly without the influence of special interest groups.[5] Critics have suggested that a "technocratic divide" challenges more participatory models of democracy, describing these divides as "efficacy gaps that persist between governing bodies employing technocratic principles and members of the general public aiming to contribute to government decision making".[6]

History of the term

The term technocracy is derived from the Greek words τέχνη, tekhne meaning skill and κράτος, kratos meaning power, as in governance, or rule. William Henry Smyth, a California engineer, is usually credited with inventing the word technocracy in 1919 to describe "the rule of the people made effective through the agency of their servants, the scientists and engineers", although the word had been used before on several occasions.[5][7][8] Smyth used the term Technocracy in his 1919 article "'Technocracy'—Ways and Means to Gain Industrial Democracy" in the journal Industrial Management (57).[9] Smyth's usage referred to Industrial democracy: a movement to integrate workers into decision-making through existing firms or revolution.[9]

In the 1930s, through the influence of Howard Scott and the technocracy movement he founded, the term technocracy came to mean 'government by technical decision making', using an energy metric of value. Scott proposed that money be replaced by energy certificates denominated in units such as ergs or joules, equivalent in total amount to an appropriate national net energy budget, and then distributed equally among the North American population, according to resource availability.[10][1]

There is in common usage found the derivative term technocrat. The word technocrat can refer to someone exercising governmental authority because of their knowledge,[11] "a member of a powerful technical elite", or "someone who advocates the supremacy of technical experts".[12][3][4] McDonnell and Valbruzzi define a prime minister or minister as a technocrat if "at the time of their appointment to government, they: have never held public office under the banner of a political party; are not a formal member of any party; and are said to possess recognized non-party political expertise which is directly relevant to the role occupied in government".[13] In Russia, the President of Russia has often nominated ministers based on technical expertise from outside political circles, and these have been referred to as "technocrats".[14][15]

Precursors

Before the term technocracy was coined, technocratic or quasi-technocratic ideas involving governance by technical experts were promoted by various individuals, most notably early socialist theorists such as Henri de Saint-Simon. This was expressed by the belief in state ownership over the economy, with the state's function being transformed from pure philosophical rule over men into a scientific administration of things and a direction of production processes under scientific management.[16] According to Daniel Bell:

"St. Simon's vision of industrial society, a vision of pure technocracy, was a system of planning and rational order in which society would specify its needs and organize the factors of production to achieve them."[17]

Citing the ideas of St. Simon, Bell concludes that the "administration of things" by rational judgment is the hallmark of technocracy.[17]

Alexander Bogdanov, a Russian scientist and social theorist, also anticipated a conception of technocratic process. Both Bogdanov's fiction and his political writings, which were highly influential, suggest that he expected a coming revolution against capitalism to lead to a technocratic society.[18]

From 1913 until 1922, Bogdanov immersed himself in writing a lengthy philosophical treatise of original ideas, Tectology: Universal Organization Science. Tectology anticipated many basic ideas of systems analysis, later explored by cybernetics. In Tectology, Bogdanov proposed unifying all social, biological, and physical sciences by considering them as systems of relationships and seeking organizational principles that underlie all systems.

Arguably, the Platonic idea of philosopher-kings represents a sort of technocracy in which the state is run by those with specialist knowledge, in this case, knowledge of the Good rather than scientific knowledge.[citation needed] The Platonic claim is that those who best understand goodness should be empowered to lead the state, as they would lead it toward the path of happiness. Whilst knowledge of the Good differs from knowledge of science, rulers are here appointed based on a certain grasp of technical skill rather than democratic mandate.

Characteristics

Technocrats are individuals with technical training and occupations who perceive many important societal problems as being solvable with the applied use of technology and related applications. The administrative scientist Gunnar K. A. Njalsson theorizes that technocrats are primarily driven by their cognitive "problem-solution mindsets" and only in part by particular occupational group interests. Their activities and the increasing success of their ideas are thought to be a crucial factor behind the modern spread of technology and the largely ideological concept of the "information society". Technocrats may be distinguished from "econocrats" and "bureaucrats" whose problem-solution mindsets differ from those of the technocrats.[19]

Examples

In 2013, a European Union library briefing on its legislative structure referred to the Commission as a "technocratic authority", holding a "legislative monopoly" over the EU lawmaking process.[20] The briefing suggests that this system, which elevates the European Parliament to a vetoing and amending body, was "originally rooted in the mistrust of the political process in post-war Europe". This system is unusual since the Commission's sole right of legislative initiative is a power usually associated with Parliaments.

The former government of the Soviet Union has been referred to as a technocracy.[21] Soviet leaders like Leonid Brezhnev often had a technical background. In 1986, 89% of Politburo members were engineers.[21]

Leaders of the Chinese Communist Party used to be mostly professional engineers. According to surveys of municipal governments of cities with a population of 1 million or more in China, it has been found that over 80% of government personnel had a technical education.[22][23] Under the five-year plans of the People's Republic of China, projects such as the National Trunk Highway System, the China high-speed rail system, and the Three Gorges Dam have been completed.[24][page needed] During China's 20th National Congress, a class of technocrats in finance and economics are replaced in favor of high-tech technocrats.[25][26]

Several governments in European parliamentary democracies have been labelled 'technocratic' based on the participation of unelected experts ('technocrats') in prominent positions.[3] Since the 1990s, Italy has had several such governments (in Italian, governo tecnico) in times of economic or political crisis,[27][28] including the formation in which economist Mario Monti presided over a cabinet of unelected professionals.[29][30] The term 'technocratic' has been applied to governments where a cabinet of elected professional politicians is led by an unelected prime minister, such as in the cases of the 2011-2012 Greek government led by economist Lucas Papademos and the Czech Republic's 2009–2010 caretaker government presided over by the state's chief statistician, Jan Fischer.[4][31] In December 2013, in the framework of the national dialogue facilitated by the Tunisian National Dialogue Quartet, political parties in Tunisia agreed to install a technocratic government led by Mehdi Jomaa.[32]

The article "Technocrats: Minds Like Machines"[4] states that Singapore is perhaps the best advertisement for technocracy: the political and expert components of the governing system there seem to have merged completely. This was underlined in a 1993 article in "Wired" by Sandy Sandfort,[33] where he describes the information technology system of the island even at that early date making it effectively intelligent.

Engineering

Following Samuel Haber,[34] Donald Stabile argues that engineers were faced with a conflict between physical efficiency and cost efficiency in the new corporate capitalist enterprises of the late nineteenth-century United States. Because of their perceptions of market demand, the profit-conscious, non-technical managers of firms where the engineers work often impose limits on the projects that engineers desire to undertake.

The prices of all inputs vary with market forces, thereby upsetting the engineer's careful calculations. As a result, the engineer loses control over projects and must continually revise plans. To maintain control over projects, the engineer must attempt to control these outside variables and transform them into constant factors.[35]

Technocracy movement

The American economist and sociologist Thorstein Veblen was an early advocate of technocracy and was involved in the Technical Alliance, as were Howard Scott and M. King Hubbert (the latter of whom later developed the theory of peak oil). Veblen believed technological developments would eventually lead to a socialistic reorganization of economic affairs. Veblen saw socialism as one intermediate phase in an ongoing evolutionary process in society that would be brought about by the natural decay of the business enterprise system and the rise of the engineers.[36] Daniel Bell sees an affinity between Veblen and the Technocracy movement.[37]

In 1932, Howard Scott and Marion King Hubbert founded Technocracy Incorporated and proposed that money be replaced by energy certificates. The group argued that apolitical, rational engineers should be vested with the authority to guide an economy into a thermodynamically balanced load of production and consumption, thereby doing away with unemployment and debt.[1]

The technocracy movement was briefly popular in the US in the early 1930s during the Great Depression. By the mid-1930s, interest in the movement was declining. Some historians have attributed the decline to the rise of Roosevelt's New Deal.[38][39]

Historian William E. Akin rejects this conclusion. Instead, Akin argues that the movement declined in the mid-1930s due to the technocrats' failure to devise a 'viable political theory for achieving change'.[40] Akin postulates that many technocrats remained vocal, dissatisfied, and often sympathetic to anti-New Deal third-party efforts.[41]

Critiques

Critics have suggested that a "technocratic divide" exists between a governing body controlled to varying extents by technocrats and members of the general public.[6] Technocratic divides are "efficacy gaps that persist between governing bodies employing technocratic principles and members of the general public aiming to contribute to government decision making".[6] Technocracy privileges the opinions and viewpoints of technical experts, exalting them into a kind of aristocracy while marginalizing the opinions and viewpoints of the general public.[42][43]

As major multinational technology corporations (e.g., FAANG) swell market caps and customer counts, critiques of technocratic government in the 21st century see its manifestation in American politics not as an "authoritarian nightmare of oppression and violence" but rather as an éminence grise: a democratic cabal directed by Mark Zuckerberg and the entire cohort of "Big Tech" executives.[44][45] It is not explained how Mark Zuckerberg or other big tech corporate heads (who are not elected by the people) can form a "democratic" cabal. In his 1982 Technology and Culture journal article, "The Technocratic Image and the Theory of Technocracy", John G. Gunnell presciently writes: "...politics is increasingly subject to the influence of technological change", with specific reference to the advent of The Long Boom and the genesis of the Internet, following the 1973-1975 Recession.[46][47] Gunnel goes on to add three levels of analysis that delineate technology's political influence:

  1. "Political power tends to gravitate towards technological elites".
  2. "Technology has become autonomous" and thus impenetrable by political structures.
  3. "Technology (and science) constitute a new legitimizing ideology", as well as triumphing over "tribalism, nationalism, the crusading spirit in religion, bigotry, censorship, racism, persecution, immigration and emigration restrictions, tariffs, and chauvinism".[46][48]

In each of the three analytical levels, Gunnell foretells technology's infiltration of political processes and suggests that the entanglement of the two (i.e. technology and politics) will inevitably produce power concentrations around those with advanced technological training, namely the technocrats.[46] Forty years after the publication of Gunnell's writings, technology and government have become, for better or for worse, increasingly intertwined.[49][50][51] Facebook can be considered a technocratic microcosm, a "technocratic nation-state" with a cyberspatial population that surpasses any terrestrial nation.[52] In a broader sense, critics fear that the rise of social media networks (e.g. Twitter, YouTube, Instagram, Pinterest), coupled with the "decline in mainstream engagement", imperil the "networked young citizen" to inconspicuous coercion and indoctrination by algorithmic mechanisms, and, less insidiously, to the persuasion of particular candidates based predominantly on "Social Media engagement".[53][54][55]

In a 2022 article published in Boston Review, political scientist Matthew Cole highlights two problems with technocracy: that it creates "unjust concentrations of power" and relies on a "flawed theory of knowledge."[56] With respect to the first point, Cole argues that technocracy excludes citizens from policy-making processes while advantaging elites. With respect to the second, he argues that the value of expertise is overestimated in technocratic systems, and points to an alternative concept of "smart democracy" which enlists the knowledge of ordinary citizens.

See also

References

  1. ^ a b c Berndt, Ernst R. (1982). "From technocracy to net energy analysis: engineers, economists and recurring energy theories of value" (PDF). Alfred P. Sloan School of Management, Massachusetts Institute of Technology. hdl:1721.1/2023. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  2. ^ (PDF). 1943-04-14. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2019-03-31. Retrieved 2008-05-04. p.35 (p.44 of PDF), p.35
  3. ^ a b c "Who, What, Why: What can technocrats achieve that politicians can't?". BBC News. BBC. November 14, 2011. Retrieved April 23, 2013.
  4. ^ a b c d "Technocrats: Minds like machines". The Economist. 19 November 2011. Retrieved 21 February 2012.
  5. ^ a b . Technocracy.org. Archived from the original on 22 April 2009.
  6. ^ a b c Obar, Jonathan A. (2016). "Closing the Technocratic Divide? Activist Intermediaries, Digital Form Letters, and Public Involvement in FCC Policy Making". International Journal of Communication. 10.
  7. ^ . 2001-03-11. Archived from the original on December 30, 2004. Retrieved 2012-05-16.
  8. ^ Barry Jones (1995, fourth edition). Sleepers, Wake! Technology and the Future of Work, Oxford University Press, p. 214.
  9. ^ a b Oxford English Dictionary 3rd edition (Word from 2nd edition 1989)
  10. ^ "Technocracy - Define Technocracy at Dictionary.com". Dictionary.com.
  11. ^ "Technocracy facts, information, pictures | Encyclopedia.com articles about Technocracy". www.encyclopedia.com. Retrieved 2017-01-09.
  12. ^ Wickman, Forrest (November 11, 2011). "What's a Technocrat?". Slate. The Slate Group.
  13. ^ McDonnell, Duncan; Valbruzzi, Marco (2014). "Defining and classifying technocrat-led and technocratic governments". European Journal of Political Research. 53 (4): 654–671. doi:10.1111/1475-6765.12054.
  14. ^ Peleschuk, Dan (14 June 2017). "If Putin Died Tomorrow, Who Would Take Over? These Technocrats Have a Chance". Ozy.
  15. ^ . Intersection Project. 2017-08-15. Archived from the original on 2019-04-25. Retrieved 2018-01-07.
  16. ^ Encyclopædia Britannica, Saint Simon; Socialism
  17. ^ a b Bell, Daniel (2008) [1st. Pub. 1976]. The Coming Of Post-industrial Society. p. 76. ISBN 978-0465097135. Retrieved 2014-11-02.
  18. ^ . worldsocialism.org. Archived from the original on 2007-09-26.
  19. ^ Njálsson, Gunnar K. A. (2005). "From Autonomous to Socially Conceived Technology: Toward a Causal, Intentional and Systematic Analysis of Interests and Elites in Public Technology Policy". Theoria: A Journal of Social and Political Theory. 52 (108): 56–81. doi:10.3167/th.2005.5210805. JSTOR 41802302.
  20. ^ "Parliament's legislative initiative" (PDF). Library of the European Parliament. 24 Oct 2013. Retrieved 24 May 2019.
  21. ^ a b Graham, Loren R. (1993). The Ghost of the Executed Engineer: Technology and the Fall of the Soviet Union. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press. pp. 73-74. ISBN 9780674354364.
  22. ^ Cheng, Li; White, Lynn (1990). "Elite Transformation and Modern Change in Mainland China and Taiwan: Empirical Data and the Theory of Technocracy". The China Quarterly. 121 (121): 1–35. doi:10.1017/S0305741000013497. JSTOR 654061. S2CID 154544102.
  23. ^ "Why do Chinese leaders have a degree in engineering and American leaders have degrees in law?". Gigazine. 2016-03-01. Retrieved 2018-03-18.
  24. ^ Andreas, Joel (2009). Rise of the Red Engineers: The Cultural Revolution and the Origins of China's New Class. Stanford, CA: Stanford University Press. ISBN 9780804760775.
  25. ^ "Why Chinese leader Xi Jinping wants more technocrats in key roles". South China Morning Post. 2022-05-17.
  26. ^ "A new breed of technocratic elites in the Xi era: Countdown to the 20th Party Congress". Think China, Singapore. 2022-09-30.
  27. ^ Gundle, Stephen; Parker, Simon, eds. (1996) [1st. Pub. 1996]. The new Italian Republic: from the fall of the Berlin Wall to Berlusconi. Routledge. ISBN 978-0-415-12162-0. Retrieved 21 February 2012.
  28. ^ D'Alimonte, Roberto; Bartolini, Stefano (1997). "'Electoral Transition' and party system change in Italy". In Bull, Martin J; Rhodes, Martin (eds.). In: Crisis and transition in Italian politics. Routledge. p. 226. ISBN 978-0-7146-4366-3.
  29. ^ MacKenzie, James; Moody, Barry (16 November 2011). "Italy gets new technocrat government". Reuters. Retrieved 19 February 2012.
  30. ^ "Italy's new prime minister — The full Monti: Mario Monti holds out for a technocratic government until 2013". The Economist. 19 November 2011. Retrieved 19 February 2012.
  31. ^ "Q&A: Greece's 'technocratic' government". BBC News. 11 November 2011. Retrieved 21 February 2012.
  32. ^ "Tunisia's new prime minister takes office". AlJazeera. AlJazeera. Retrieved 17 November 2015.
  33. ^ Sandfort, Sandy (1993). "The Intelligent Island". Wired. Vol. 1, no. 4 (September/October). ISSN 1059-1028.
  34. ^ Haber, Samuel. Efficiency and Uplift Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1964.
  35. ^ Stabile, Donald R. (1986). "Veblen and the Political Economy of the Engineer". American Journal of Economics and Sociology. 45 (1): 41–52. doi:10.1111/j.1536-7150.1986.tb01899.x.
  36. ^ Wood, John (1993). The life of Thorstein Veblen and perspectives on his thought. introd. Thorstein Veblen. New York: Routledge. p. 369. ISBN 978-0-415-07487-2. The decisive difference between Marx and Veblen lay in their respective attitudes on socialism. For while Marx regarded socialism as the ultimate goal for civilization, Veblen saw socialism as but one stage in the economic evolution of society.
  37. ^ Bell, Daniel (1963). "Veblen and the New Class". The American Scholar. 32 (4): 616–638. JSTOR 41209141. (cited in Tilman, Rick (1992). Thorstein Veblen and His Critics, 1891-1963: Conservative, Liberal, and Radical Perspectives. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press. p. 186. ISBN 9781400862863.)
  38. ^ Burris, Beverly H. (1993). Technocracy at Work. State University of New York Press. p. 32. ISBN 9780791414958.
  39. ^ Fischer, Frank (1990). Technocracy and the Politics of Expertise. SAGE Publications. p. 86. ISBN 9780803933798.
  40. ^ Nelson, Daniel (1978). "Technocratic Abundance. [Reviewed Work: Technocracy and the American Dream: The Technocrat Movement, 1900-1941. by William E. Akin]". Reviews in American History. 6 (1): 104–108. doi:10.2307/2701484. JSTOR 2701484.
  41. ^ McNulty, P. J. (1978). "Technocracy and the American Dream: The Technocrat Movement, 1900-1941. By William E. Akin [book review]". History of Political Economy. 10 (4): 682–683. doi:10.1215/00182702-10-4-682.
  42. ^ Fisher, W.R. (1987). Human communication as narration: Toward a philosophy of reason, value and action. Columbia: University of South Carolina Press.
  43. ^ McKenna, Bernard J.; Graham, Philip (2000). "Technocratic Discourse: A Primer". Journal of Technical Writing and Communication. 30 (3): 223–251. doi:10.2190/56FY-V5TH-2U3U-MHQK. S2CID 142939905.
  44. ^ Runciman, David (2018-05-01). "Why replacing politicians with experts is a reckless idea". The Guardian. ISSN 0261-3077. Retrieved 2020-06-13.
  45. ^ Blum, Sam (16 January 2020). "How All Our Tech Heroes Turned into Tech Villains". GQ. Retrieved 2020-06-13.
  46. ^ a b c Gunnell, John G. (July 1982). "The Technocratic Image and the Theory of Technocracy". Technology and Culture. 23 (3): 392–416. doi:10.2307/3104485. JSTOR 3104485. PMID 11611029.
  47. ^ Leyden, Peter Schwartz,Peter (1997-07-01). "The Long Boom: A History of the Future, 1980–2020". Wired. ISSN 1059-1028. Retrieved 2020-06-13.
  48. ^ Boorstin, Daniel J. The Republic of Technology (New York, 1978), p. 6, 59.
  49. ^ "Jeff Bezos Says Tech Shouldn't Turn Against the Federal Government". www.govtech.com. 17 October 2018. Retrieved 2020-06-13.
  50. ^ Editorial Board. "Opinion | Facebook is looking a lot like a government". Washington Post. Retrieved 2020-06-13.
  51. ^ Leetaru, Kalev. "Facebook As The Ultimate Government Surveillance Tool?". Forbes. Retrieved 2020-06-13.
  52. ^ LaFrance, Adrienne (2020-01-25). "Hillary Clinton: Mark Zuckerberg Has 'Authoritarian' Views on Misinformation". The Atlantic. Retrieved 2020-06-13.
  53. ^ Brian D. Loader, Ariadne Vromen & Michael A. Xenos (2014) The networked young citizen: social media, political participation and civic engagement, Information, Communication & Society, 17:2
  54. ^ Norris, P. (2002). Democratic phoenix: Reinventing democratic activism. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press
  55. ^ Effing, Robin; Van Hillegersberg, Jos; Huibers, Theo (2011). "Social Media and Political Participation: Are Facebook, Twitter and YouTube Democratizing Our Political Systems?" (PDF). Human Media Interaction. Lecture Notes in Computer Science. 6847: 25–35. doi:10.1007/978-3-642-23333-3_3. ISBN 978-3-642-23332-6.
  56. ^ Cole, Matthew. ""What's Wrong with Technocracy"?". Boston Review. Retrieved 12 October 2022.

External links

  •   Technocracy by William Henry Smyth public domain audiobook at LibriVox
  • William Henry Smyth, Technocracy Parts I-IV., Working Explosively, A Protest Against Mechanistic Efficiency. Working Explosively Versus Working Efficiently. at archive.org
    • William Henry Smyth, Technocracy Part I., Human Instincts in Reconstruction: An Analysis of Urges and Suggestions for Their Direction., [1]
    • William Henry Smyth, Technocracy Part II., National Industrial Management: Practical Suggestions for National Reconstruction., [2]
    • William Henry Smyth, Technocracy Part III., "Technocracy" - Ways and Means To Gain Industrial Democracy., [3]
    • William Henry Smyth, Technocracy Part IV., Skill Economics for Industrial Democracy., go to page 9 of 38
  • Technocracy: An Alternative Social System – Arvid Peterson – (1980) on YouTube
  • Marion King Hubbert, Howard Scott, Technocracy Inc., Technocracy Study Course Unabridged, New York, 1st Edition, 1934; 5th Edition, 1940, 4th printing, July 1945.
  • Stuart Chase, Technocracy: An Interpretation [4]
  • Technocracy and Socialism, by Paul Blanshard.

technocracy, this, article, about, form, government, other, uses, disambiguation, form, government, which, decision, makers, selected, based, their, expertise, given, area, responsibility, particularly, with, regard, scientific, technical, knowledge, this, sys. This article is about the form of government For other uses see Technocracy disambiguation Technocracy is a form of government in which the decision makers are selected based on their expertise in a given area of responsibility particularly with regard to scientific or technical knowledge This system explicitly contrasts with representative democracy the notion that elected representatives should be the primary decision makers in government 1 though it does not necessarily imply eliminating elected representatives Decision makers are selected based on specialized knowledge and performance rather than political affiliations parliamentary skills or popularity 2 The term technocracy was initially used to signify the application of the scientific method to solving social problems In its most extreme form technocracy is an entire government running as a technical or engineering problem and is mostly hypothetical In more practical use technocracy is any portion of a bureaucracy run by technologists A government in which elected officials appoint experts and professionals to administer individual government functions and recommend legislation can be considered technocratic 3 4 Some uses of the word refer to a form of meritocracy where the ablest are in charge ostensibly without the influence of special interest groups 5 Critics have suggested that a technocratic divide challenges more participatory models of democracy describing these divides as efficacy gaps that persist between governing bodies employing technocratic principles and members of the general public aiming to contribute to government decision making 6 Contents 1 History of the term 2 Precursors 3 Characteristics 3 1 Examples 3 2 Engineering 4 Technocracy movement 5 Critiques 6 See also 7 References 8 External linksHistory of the term EditThe term technocracy is derived from the Greek words texnh tekhne meaning skill and kratos kratos meaning power as in governance or rule William Henry Smyth a California engineer is usually credited with inventing the word technocracy in 1919 to describe the rule of the people made effective through the agency of their servants the scientists and engineers although the word had been used before on several occasions 5 7 8 Smyth used the term Technocracy in his 1919 article Technocracy Ways and Means to Gain Industrial Democracy in the journal Industrial Management 57 9 Smyth s usage referred to Industrial democracy a movement to integrate workers into decision making through existing firms or revolution 9 In the 1930s through the influence of Howard Scott and the technocracy movement he founded the term technocracy came to mean government by technical decision making using an energy metric of value Scott proposed that money be replaced by energy certificates denominated in units such as ergs or joules equivalent in total amount to an appropriate national net energy budget and then distributed equally among the North American population according to resource availability 10 1 There is in common usage found the derivative term technocrat The word technocrat can refer to someone exercising governmental authority because of their knowledge 11 a member of a powerful technical elite or someone who advocates the supremacy of technical experts 12 3 4 McDonnell and Valbruzzi define a prime minister or minister as a technocrat if at the time of their appointment to government they have never held public office under the banner of a political party are not a formal member of any party and are said to possess recognized non party political expertise which is directly relevant to the role occupied in government 13 In Russia the President of Russia has often nominated ministers based on technical expertise from outside political circles and these have been referred to as technocrats 14 15 Precursors EditBefore the term technocracy was coined technocratic or quasi technocratic ideas involving governance by technical experts were promoted by various individuals most notably early socialist theorists such as Henri de Saint Simon This was expressed by the belief in state ownership over the economy with the state s function being transformed from pure philosophical rule over men into a scientific administration of things and a direction of production processes under scientific management 16 According to Daniel Bell St Simon s vision of industrial society a vision of pure technocracy was a system of planning and rational order in which society would specify its needs and organize the factors of production to achieve them 17 Citing the ideas of St Simon Bell concludes that the administration of things by rational judgment is the hallmark of technocracy 17 Alexander Bogdanov a Russian scientist and social theorist also anticipated a conception of technocratic process Both Bogdanov s fiction and his political writings which were highly influential suggest that he expected a coming revolution against capitalism to lead to a technocratic society 18 From 1913 until 1922 Bogdanov immersed himself in writing a lengthy philosophical treatise of original ideas Tectology Universal Organization Science Tectology anticipated many basic ideas of systems analysis later explored by cybernetics In Tectology Bogdanov proposed unifying all social biological and physical sciences by considering them as systems of relationships and seeking organizational principles that underlie all systems Arguably the Platonic idea of philosopher kings represents a sort of technocracy in which the state is run by those with specialist knowledge in this case knowledge of the Good rather than scientific knowledge citation needed The Platonic claim is that those who best understand goodness should be empowered to lead the state as they would lead it toward the path of happiness Whilst knowledge of the Good differs from knowledge of science rulers are here appointed based on a certain grasp of technical skill rather than democratic mandate Characteristics EditTechnocrats are individuals with technical training and occupations who perceive many important societal problems as being solvable with the applied use of technology and related applications The administrative scientist Gunnar K A Njalsson theorizes that technocrats are primarily driven by their cognitive problem solution mindsets and only in part by particular occupational group interests Their activities and the increasing success of their ideas are thought to be a crucial factor behind the modern spread of technology and the largely ideological concept of the information society Technocrats may be distinguished from econocrats and bureaucrats whose problem solution mindsets differ from those of the technocrats 19 Examples Edit In 2013 a European Union library briefing on its legislative structure referred to the Commission as a technocratic authority holding a legislative monopoly over the EU lawmaking process 20 The briefing suggests that this system which elevates the European Parliament to a vetoing and amending body was originally rooted in the mistrust of the political process in post war Europe This system is unusual since the Commission s sole right of legislative initiative is a power usually associated with Parliaments The former government of the Soviet Union has been referred to as a technocracy 21 Soviet leaders like Leonid Brezhnev often had a technical background In 1986 89 of Politburo members were engineers 21 Leaders of the Chinese Communist Party used to be mostly professional engineers According to surveys of municipal governments of cities with a population of 1 million or more in China it has been found that over 80 of government personnel had a technical education 22 23 Under the five year plans of the People s Republic of China projects such as the National Trunk Highway System the China high speed rail system and the Three Gorges Dam have been completed 24 page needed During China s 20th National Congress a class of technocrats in finance and economics are replaced in favor of high tech technocrats 25 26 Several governments in European parliamentary democracies have been labelled technocratic based on the participation of unelected experts technocrats in prominent positions 3 Since the 1990s Italy has had several such governments in Italian governo tecnico in times of economic or political crisis 27 28 including the formation in which economist Mario Monti presided over a cabinet of unelected professionals 29 30 The term technocratic has been applied to governments where a cabinet of elected professional politicians is led by an unelected prime minister such as in the cases of the 2011 2012 Greek government led by economist Lucas Papademos and the Czech Republic s 2009 2010 caretaker government presided over by the state s chief statistician Jan Fischer 4 31 In December 2013 in the framework of the national dialogue facilitated by the Tunisian National Dialogue Quartet political parties in Tunisia agreed to install a technocratic government led by Mehdi Jomaa 32 The article Technocrats Minds Like Machines 4 states that Singapore is perhaps the best advertisement for technocracy the political and expert components of the governing system there seem to have merged completely This was underlined in a 1993 article in Wired by Sandy Sandfort 33 where he describes the information technology system of the island even at that early date making it effectively intelligent Engineering Edit Following Samuel Haber 34 Donald Stabile argues that engineers were faced with a conflict between physical efficiency and cost efficiency in the new corporate capitalist enterprises of the late nineteenth century United States Because of their perceptions of market demand the profit conscious non technical managers of firms where the engineers work often impose limits on the projects that engineers desire to undertake The prices of all inputs vary with market forces thereby upsetting the engineer s careful calculations As a result the engineer loses control over projects and must continually revise plans To maintain control over projects the engineer must attempt to control these outside variables and transform them into constant factors 35 Technocracy movement EditMain article Technocracy movement The American economist and sociologist Thorstein Veblen was an early advocate of technocracy and was involved in the Technical Alliance as were Howard Scott and M King Hubbert the latter of whom later developed the theory of peak oil Veblen believed technological developments would eventually lead to a socialistic reorganization of economic affairs Veblen saw socialism as one intermediate phase in an ongoing evolutionary process in society that would be brought about by the natural decay of the business enterprise system and the rise of the engineers 36 Daniel Bell sees an affinity between Veblen and the Technocracy movement 37 In 1932 Howard Scott and Marion King Hubbert founded Technocracy Incorporated and proposed that money be replaced by energy certificates The group argued that apolitical rational engineers should be vested with the authority to guide an economy into a thermodynamically balanced load of production and consumption thereby doing away with unemployment and debt 1 The technocracy movement was briefly popular in the US in the early 1930s during the Great Depression By the mid 1930s interest in the movement was declining Some historians have attributed the decline to the rise of Roosevelt s New Deal 38 39 Historian William E Akin rejects this conclusion Instead Akin argues that the movement declined in the mid 1930s due to the technocrats failure to devise a viable political theory for achieving change 40 Akin postulates that many technocrats remained vocal dissatisfied and often sympathetic to anti New Deal third party efforts 41 Critiques EditCritics have suggested that a technocratic divide exists between a governing body controlled to varying extents by technocrats and members of the general public 6 Technocratic divides are efficacy gaps that persist between governing bodies employing technocratic principles and members of the general public aiming to contribute to government decision making 6 Technocracy privileges the opinions and viewpoints of technical experts exalting them into a kind of aristocracy while marginalizing the opinions and viewpoints of the general public 42 43 As major multinational technology corporations e g FAANG swell market caps and customer counts critiques of technocratic government in the 21st century see its manifestation in American politics not as an authoritarian nightmare of oppression and violence but rather as an eminence grise a democratic cabal directed by Mark Zuckerberg and the entire cohort of Big Tech executives 44 45 It is not explained how Mark Zuckerberg or other big tech corporate heads who are not elected by the people can form a democratic cabal In his 1982 Technology and Culture journal article The Technocratic Image and the Theory of Technocracy John G Gunnell presciently writes politics is increasingly subject to the influence of technological change with specific reference to the advent of The Long Boom and the genesis of the Internet following the 1973 1975 Recession 46 47 Gunnel goes on to add three levels of analysis that delineate technology s political influence Political power tends to gravitate towards technological elites Technology has become autonomous and thus impenetrable by political structures Technology and science constitute a new legitimizing ideology as well as triumphing over tribalism nationalism the crusading spirit in religion bigotry censorship racism persecution immigration and emigration restrictions tariffs and chauvinism 46 48 In each of the three analytical levels Gunnell foretells technology s infiltration of political processes and suggests that the entanglement of the two i e technology and politics will inevitably produce power concentrations around those with advanced technological training namely the technocrats 46 Forty years after the publication of Gunnell s writings technology and government have become for better or for worse increasingly intertwined 49 50 51 Facebook can be considered a technocratic microcosm a technocratic nation state with a cyberspatial population that surpasses any terrestrial nation 52 In a broader sense critics fear that the rise of social media networks e g Twitter YouTube Instagram Pinterest coupled with the decline in mainstream engagement imperil the networked young citizen to inconspicuous coercion and indoctrination by algorithmic mechanisms and less insidiously to the persuasion of particular candidates based predominantly on Social Media engagement 53 54 55 In a 2022 article published in Boston Review political scientist Matthew Cole highlights two problems with technocracy that it creates unjust concentrations of power and relies on a flawed theory of knowledge 56 With respect to the first point Cole argues that technocracy excludes citizens from policy making processes while advantaging elites With respect to the second he argues that the value of expertise is overestimated in technocratic systems and points to an alternative concept of smart democracy which enlists the knowledge of ordinary citizens See also EditBright green environmentalism Continentalism Cyberocracy a hypothetical form of government that rules by the effective use of information Groupe X Crise formed by French former students of the Ecole Polytechnique engineer school in the 1930s Imperial examination an examination system in Imperial China designed to select the best administrative officials for the state s bureaucracy Positivism Post politics Post scarcity economy Project Cybersyn Redressement Francais a French technocratic movement founded by Ernest Mercier in 1925 Scientism Scientocracy the practice of basing public policies on science Techno populism Thermoeconomics Player Piano Kurt Vonnegut s speculative fiction novel describing a technocratic society The Revolt of the Masses a book by Jose Ortega y Gasset containing a critique of technocracy Wealth Virtual Wealth and Debt a book by Nobel prize winning chemist Frederick Soddy on monetary policy and society and the role of energy in economic systemsReferences Edit a b c Berndt Ernst R 1982 From technocracy to net energy analysis engineers economists and recurring energy theories of value PDF Alfred P Sloan School of Management Massachusetts Institute of Technology hdl 1721 1 2023 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Questioning of M King Hubbert Division of Supply and Resources before the Board of Economic Warfare PDF 1943 04 14 Archived from the original PDF on 2019 03 31 Retrieved 2008 05 04 p 35 p 44 of PDF p 35 a b c Who What Why What can technocrats achieve that politicians can t BBC News BBC November 14 2011 Retrieved April 23 2013 a b c d Technocrats Minds like machines The Economist 19 November 2011 Retrieved 21 February 2012 a b History and Purpose of Technocracy by Howard Scott Technocracy org Archived from the original on 22 April 2009 a b c Obar Jonathan A 2016 Closing the Technocratic Divide Activist Intermediaries Digital Form Letters and Public Involvement in FCC Policy Making International Journal of Communication 10 Who Is A Technocrat Wilton Ivie 1953 2001 03 11 Archived from the original on December 30 2004 Retrieved 2012 05 16 Barry Jones 1995 fourth edition Sleepers Wake Technology and the Future of Work Oxford University Press p 214 a b Oxford English Dictionary 3rd edition Word from 2nd edition 1989 Technocracy Define Technocracy at Dictionary com Dictionary com Technocracy facts information pictures Encyclopedia com articles about Technocracy www encyclopedia com Retrieved 2017 01 09 Wickman Forrest November 11 2011 What s a Technocrat Slate The Slate Group McDonnell Duncan Valbruzzi Marco 2014 Defining and classifying technocrat led and technocratic governments European Journal of Political Research 53 4 654 671 doi 10 1111 1475 6765 12054 Peleschuk Dan 14 June 2017 If Putin Died Tomorrow Who Would Take Over These Technocrats Have a Chance Ozy The plight of Russia s technocrats Intersection Project 2017 08 15 Archived from the original on 2019 04 25 Retrieved 2018 01 07 Encyclopaedia Britannica Saint Simon Socialism a b Bell Daniel 2008 1st Pub 1976 The Coming Of Post industrial Society p 76 ISBN 978 0465097135 Retrieved 2014 11 02 Bogdanov technocracy and socialism worldsocialism org Archived from the original on 2007 09 26 Njalsson Gunnar K A 2005 From Autonomous to Socially Conceived Technology Toward a Causal Intentional and Systematic Analysis of Interests and Elites in Public Technology Policy Theoria A Journal of Social and Political Theory 52 108 56 81 doi 10 3167 th 2005 5210805 JSTOR 41802302 Parliament s legislative initiative PDF Library of the European Parliament 24 Oct 2013 Retrieved 24 May 2019 a b Graham Loren R 1993 The Ghost of the Executed Engineer Technology and the Fall of the Soviet Union Cambridge MA Harvard University Press pp 73 74 ISBN 9780674354364 Cheng Li White Lynn 1990 Elite Transformation and Modern Change in Mainland China and Taiwan Empirical Data and the Theory of Technocracy The China Quarterly 121 121 1 35 doi 10 1017 S0305741000013497 JSTOR 654061 S2CID 154544102 Why do Chinese leaders have a degree in engineering and American leaders have degrees in law Gigazine 2016 03 01 Retrieved 2018 03 18 Andreas Joel 2009 Rise of the Red Engineers The Cultural Revolution and the Origins of China s New Class Stanford CA Stanford University Press ISBN 9780804760775 Why Chinese leader Xi Jinping wants more technocrats in key roles South China Morning Post 2022 05 17 A new breed of technocratic elites in the Xi era Countdown to the 20th Party Congress Think China Singapore 2022 09 30 Gundle Stephen Parker Simon eds 1996 1st Pub 1996 The new Italian Republic from the fall of the Berlin Wall to Berlusconi Routledge ISBN 978 0 415 12162 0 Retrieved 21 February 2012 D Alimonte Roberto Bartolini Stefano 1997 Electoral Transition and party system change in Italy In Bull Martin J Rhodes Martin eds In Crisis and transition in Italian politics Routledge p 226 ISBN 978 0 7146 4366 3 MacKenzie James Moody Barry 16 November 2011 Italy gets new technocrat government Reuters Retrieved 19 February 2012 Italy s new prime minister The full Monti Mario Monti holds out for a technocratic government until 2013 The Economist 19 November 2011 Retrieved 19 February 2012 Q amp A Greece s technocratic government BBC News 11 November 2011 Retrieved 21 February 2012 Tunisia s new prime minister takes office AlJazeera AlJazeera Retrieved 17 November 2015 Sandfort Sandy 1993 The Intelligent Island Wired Vol 1 no 4 September October ISSN 1059 1028 Haber Samuel Efficiency and Uplift Chicago University of Chicago Press 1964 Stabile Donald R 1986 Veblen and the Political Economy of the Engineer American Journal of Economics and Sociology 45 1 41 52 doi 10 1111 j 1536 7150 1986 tb01899 x Wood John 1993 The life of Thorstein Veblen and perspectives on his thought introd Thorstein Veblen New York Routledge p 369 ISBN 978 0 415 07487 2 The decisive difference between Marx and Veblen lay in their respective attitudes on socialism For while Marx regarded socialism as the ultimate goal for civilization Veblen saw socialism as but one stage in the economic evolution of society Bell Daniel 1963 Veblen and the New Class The American Scholar 32 4 616 638 JSTOR 41209141 cited in Tilman Rick 1992 Thorstein Veblen and His Critics 1891 1963 Conservative Liberal and Radical Perspectives Princeton NJ Princeton University Press p 186 ISBN 9781400862863 Burris Beverly H 1993 Technocracy at Work State University of New York Press p 32 ISBN 9780791414958 Fischer Frank 1990 Technocracy and the Politics of Expertise SAGE Publications p 86 ISBN 9780803933798 Nelson Daniel 1978 Technocratic Abundance Reviewed Work Technocracy and the American Dream The Technocrat Movement 1900 1941 by William E Akin Reviews in American History 6 1 104 108 doi 10 2307 2701484 JSTOR 2701484 McNulty P J 1978 Technocracy and the American Dream The Technocrat Movement 1900 1941 By William E Akin book review History of Political Economy 10 4 682 683 doi 10 1215 00182702 10 4 682 Fisher W R 1987 Human communication as narration Toward a philosophy of reason value and action Columbia University of South Carolina Press McKenna Bernard J Graham Philip 2000 Technocratic Discourse A Primer Journal of Technical Writing and Communication 30 3 223 251 doi 10 2190 56FY V5TH 2U3U MHQK S2CID 142939905 Runciman David 2018 05 01 Why replacing politicians with experts is a reckless idea The Guardian ISSN 0261 3077 Retrieved 2020 06 13 Blum Sam 16 January 2020 How All Our Tech Heroes Turned into Tech Villains GQ Retrieved 2020 06 13 a b c Gunnell John G July 1982 The Technocratic Image and the Theory of Technocracy Technology and Culture 23 3 392 416 doi 10 2307 3104485 JSTOR 3104485 PMID 11611029 Leyden Peter Schwartz Peter 1997 07 01 The Long Boom A History of the Future 1980 2020 Wired ISSN 1059 1028 Retrieved 2020 06 13 Boorstin Daniel J The Republic of Technology New York 1978 p 6 59 Jeff Bezos Says Tech Shouldn t Turn Against the Federal Government www govtech com 17 October 2018 Retrieved 2020 06 13 Editorial Board Opinion Facebook is looking a lot like a government Washington Post Retrieved 2020 06 13 Leetaru Kalev Facebook As The Ultimate Government Surveillance Tool Forbes Retrieved 2020 06 13 LaFrance Adrienne 2020 01 25 Hillary Clinton Mark Zuckerberg Has Authoritarian Views on Misinformation The Atlantic Retrieved 2020 06 13 Brian D Loader Ariadne Vromen amp Michael A Xenos 2014 The networked young citizen social media political participation and civic engagement Information Communication amp Society 17 2 Norris P 2002 Democratic phoenix Reinventing democratic activism Cambridge Cambridge University Press Effing Robin Van Hillegersberg Jos Huibers Theo 2011 Social Media and Political Participation Are Facebook Twitter and YouTube Democratizing Our Political Systems PDF Human Media Interaction Lecture Notes in Computer Science 6847 25 35 doi 10 1007 978 3 642 23333 3 3 ISBN 978 3 642 23332 6 Cole Matthew What s Wrong with Technocracy Boston Review Retrieved 12 October 2022 External links Edit Wikiquote has quotations related to Technocracy Wikimedia Commons has media related to Technocracy Technocracy by William Henry Smyth public domain audiobook at LibriVox William Henry Smyth Technocracy Parts I IV Working Explosively A Protest Against Mechanistic Efficiency Working Explosively Versus Working Efficiently at archive org William Henry Smyth Technocracy Part I Human Instincts in Reconstruction An Analysis of Urges and Suggestions for Their Direction 1 William Henry Smyth Technocracy Part II National Industrial Management Practical Suggestions for National Reconstruction 2 William Henry Smyth Technocracy Part III Technocracy Ways and Means To Gain Industrial Democracy 3 William Henry Smyth Technocracy Part IV Skill Economics for Industrial Democracy go to page 9 of 38 Technocracy An Alternative Social System Arvid Peterson 1980 on YouTube Marion King Hubbert Howard Scott Technocracy Inc Technocracy Study Course Unabridged New York 1st Edition 1934 5th Edition 1940 4th printing July 1945 Stuart Chase Technocracy An Interpretation 4 Technocracy and Socialism by Paul Blanshard Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Technocracy amp oldid 1149320658, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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