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The Future

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economic rationalism -- increased inequity. economic rationalism -- greater unhappiness. economic rationalism -- loss of community ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: The Future


1
The Future
  • by Professor Ron Johnston
  • Victorian TAFE Association
  • 19 May 2001
  • Swinburne University Campus

2
http//www.aciic.org.au/
3
The Context is the Global Knowledge Economy
4
What is it?
  • Globalisation - increasing development and
    deepening of world markets in capital, goods and
    services by the increasing occurrence of
    commercial exchanges across international
    boundaries

5
Globalisation
  • Age of hyper-capitalism
  • Intangible assets increasingly important
  • Share price/net tangible assets grew by 50 in
    last 3 years.
  • Patent applications increased by 2500 in past 5
    years

6
Which Means
  • Doing business anywhere, anytime
  • Every market is a global market
  • Every consumer is a market of one
  • No company, no business is immune
  • Your most dangerous competitors are the ones you
    dont know

7
Knowledge Economy
The critical difference between the old and the
new economies is not dot.coms, nor e-commerce,
nor sustained growth without inflation.It is
that the old economy raised capital to invest in
physical capital.The new economy raises finance
to invest in ideas and innovation
8
Value of Knowledge
9
Paradoxes of Knowledge
  • Using knowledge does not consume it.
  • Transferring knowledge does not lose it.
  • Knowledge is abundant, but the ability to use it
    is scarce.
  • Producing knowledge resists organisation.
  • Much of it walks out the door at the end of the
    day.

10
In a knowledge economy the production,
distribution and use of knowledge is the main
driver of growth, wealth creation and employment
across all industries.The knowledge required is
cultural, social and managerial, as well as
technological.
11
  • Because knowledge does not wear out it is a
    source of super-value and super-productivity.
  • Knowledge alone can add value to an otherwise
    closed, zero-sum system.

12
  • A knowledge economy is a hierarchy of networks,
    driven by the acceleration of the rate of change
    and of learning.
  • The opportunity and capability to join
    knowledge-intensive and learning-intensive
    relations determines the wealth of individuals
    and firms.
  • (OECD)

13
  • The innovation system is dependent on strong
    links between all players, government, industry
    and research performers (Australias Chief
    Scientist)
  • Linkages do not simply mirror a clear-cut
    division of labour in the production of
    knowledge. They represent an institutionalised
    form of learning that provides a specific
    contribution to the stock of economically useful
    knowledge. (OECD)

14
Changing Knowledge Work
There is a shift from applying knowledge in a
relatively stable environment to using and
creating knowledge to comprehend and transform a
rapidly changing environment (Ron Johnston)
15
Which requires individuals with...
Knowledge work is...
And organisations that...
  • develop knowledge worker novices into experts
  • rapidly build effective virtual teams
  • build a culture of improvisation
  • balance creativity with risk management
  • High pattern recognition skills
  • flexibility and tolerance for ambiguity
  • Teams
  • skilled at collective sense making
  • Complex
  • Uncertain
  • Ambiguous
  • Unstructured
  • Difficult to observe and measure
  • High risk

16
Preparing the Knowledge Worker
  • Lifelong learning
  • learner-directed learning
  • learning to learn
  • contextualised learning
  • customised learning
  • transformative learning
  • collaborative/cooperative learning
  • just-in-time learning

17
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Some Major Uncertainties
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?
?
18
Opportunities and Challenges
  • From sector to network organisation
  • Seamless learning
  • From structure to relationship
  • Structural barriers
  • Navigation through learning and work
  • From supplier to consumer-driven
  • Access to learning
  • Location independent
  • Regional learning hubs
  • Stratified learning opportunities
  • Role of learning in social change
  • Need for pluralism
  • Need for public funding

19
Opportunities and Challenges
  • Information Technology
  • Unimagined impacts
  • Coherent approach to develop capability,
    alliances
  • Flexible learning
  • Efficiency and effectiveness in learning
  • Diffusion of good practice
  • Programs and targets
  • Learning as a universal cultural value
  • Progressive removal of barriers
  • Resources for learning
  • Distinction between public and private good
    blurring
  • Quality management new approaches
  • Demographic change
  • Changing nature of work
  • Casual contractor versus knowledge asset

20
Global Warming Environmental Sustainability
Beware the Sixth Extinction!
21
Power of the consumer
  • Universal perceptions
  • competition --gt reduced customer service
  • globalisation --gt reduced customer service
  • technology (computer systems) --gt reduced
    customer service
  • economic rationalism --gt increased inequity
  • economic rationalism --gt greater unhappiness
  • economic rationalism --gt loss of community

22
The Yearning for Community
  • Anti-globalisation
  • Limitations of consumerism
  • Give them circuses
  • Social and spiritual connection
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