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Gambling with “Human Capital”: on the Speculative Logic of the “Knowledge Economy”

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  • Jean François Bissonnette

    (Sophiapol, Université Paris Nanterre, France)

  • Christian Laval

    (Sophiapol, Université Paris Nanterre, France)

Abstract

The educational and academic fields have not been spared by the neoliberal logic. They indeed became one of its primary targets. Critics of neoliberalism too often neglect this, for they merely see in the latter a doctrine exclusively concerned with economic policy. They forget that knowledge constituted in fact a central element of the various approaches that contributed to the neoliberal synthesis.1 The “knowledge economy”, as it is often called, is the paradigmatic product of this synthesis. It holds that economic growth is set to become ever more “knowledge intensive”, and thus, that only those economic and political actors who manage to produce and make use of the rarest innovations and skills will prevail in the global competition between firms and the nation states that champion them...

Suggested Citation

  • Jean François Bissonnette & Christian Laval, 2017. "Gambling with “Human Capital”: on the Speculative Logic of the “Knowledge Economy”," World Economic Review, World Economics Association, vol. 2017(8), pages 6-17, April.
  • Handle: RePEc:wea:worler:v:2017:y:2017:i:8:p:6
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    References listed on IDEAS

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    1. Paul Langley, 2009. "Debt, Discipline, and Government: Foreclosure and Forbearance in the Subprime Mortgage Crisis," Environment and Planning A, , vol. 41(6), pages 1404-1419, June.
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