WORLD INDUSTRIAL REVOLUTIONS AS THE BASIS OF NANOTECHNOLOGICAL TRANSFORMATIONS

  • Dmytro Nikitin Kyiv National Economic University named after Vadym Hetman
Keywords: industrial revolution, nanotechnologies, globalization, industry 4.0, transformation

Abstract

In modern organizational, economic and institutional conditions of the world economy, nanoindustrialization objectively requires society to form adequate economic and social relations, market institutions and technological methods of production, the level of differentiation of social and labor relations, implementation mechanisms and forms of management, accounting and control of transaction costs of production, as well as regulation of market turnover of goods with special nano-features. It is important to note that the reasons for the wave-like nature of the world scientific and technological process substantiated by Western scientists, in the context of understanding the philosophy of nanoindustrialization processes, require deep methodological generalization through the prism of evolutionary progress of industrial revolutions. Тhe fourth industrial revolution is able to fully reveal the nature, driving forces and vector orientation of nanotechnological transformations of global production from modern methodological positions. The point is that nanotechnology fits into the next (after information technology and biotechnology), stage of development of industrial revolutions. Therefore, the socio-economic and scientific-technical results of their implementation in world social practice in their scale and degree of impact will certainly be radical. It is already becoming clear that nanotechnology demonstrates epoch-making innovation, capable of providing the latter with fundamentally new and in many cases unique chemical and physical (mechanical, electrical, magnetic, optical, etc.) by building specially formed nanostructures and controlled recombination of familiar objects and material structures and biological properties. This will be concentrated not only in the emergence of some kind of remote socio-economic effects, but in radical changes in scientific and technological resources of national economies and their competitive disposition in different segments of the global market.

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Meissner H., Ilsena R., Auricha J. C. (2017) Analysis of Control Architectures in the Context of Industry 4.0. Procedia CIRP. Vol. 62. P. 165–169.

Industry 4.0: How to navigate digitization of the manufacturing sector. McKinsey, 2015.

Aithal S., Aithal, P. S. (2021) Green Nanotechnology Innovations to Realize UN Sustainable Development Goals 2030. International Journal of Applied Engineering and Management Letters (IJAEML). No. 5 (2). P. 96–105.

Salamanca-Buentello F., Daar A.S. (2021) Nanotechnology, equity and global health. Nat. Nanotechnol. Vol. 16. P. 358–361.

Linton D., Walsh Т. (2004) Integrating innovation and learning curve theory: an enabler for moving nanotechnologies and other emerging process technologies into production. R&D Management. No. 34. P. 517–526.

Cozzens S., Cortes R., Soumonni O., Woodson T. (2013) Nanotechnology and the millennium development goals: water, energy, and agri-food. Journal of Nanoparticle Research. Vol. 15, Iss. 11. P. 1–14.

Niosi J., Reid S. E. (2007) Biotechnology and Nanotechnology: Science-based Enabling Technologies as Windows of Opportunity for LDCs? World Development. No. 35. P. 426–438.

Romig A. D. (2007) An introduction to nanotechnology policy: Opportunities and constraints for emerging and established economies. Technological Forecasting and Social Change. No.74. P. 1634–1642.

Published
2022-06-30
How to Cite
Nikitin, D. (2022). WORLD INDUSTRIAL REVOLUTIONS AS THE BASIS OF NANOTECHNOLOGICAL TRANSFORMATIONS. Change Management and Innovation, (3), 61-65. https://doi.org/10.32782/CMI/2022-3-11
Section
International economic relations