Tuesday, August 7, 2012

Driving forces for socioeconomic change

Shahab Sabahi
Energy and Environment for Development – Policy Analysis Research Group

Since Herbert Spencer who submitted that society should evolve from barbarian forms to civilized forms, the debate on the causes of progress or changes in society has been heated up. From Spencer’s view as society evolves, the most capable individuals rise to the top and the least capable die out. He termed this idea on social order "survival of the fittest”.  Karl Marx took a holistic approach and synthesized sociology and economics to analyze the causes of changes in society. Marx theorized that the driving force behind social order was class conflict. Class conflict theory states that the capitalists (those who possessed resources fit to create wealth) were constantly in conflict with the proletariat (workers who do not own the means of production).

In the search for the cause of changes in society, one of the widely discussed concept was introduced by Max Weber. In his treatise "Protestant Ethics and the Spirit of Capitalism" Weber combines psychological & sociological variables with economic development. Because of its determination of the value systems of societies, he put primary importance on religion. According to Weber, the Protestant religion was a precondition for capitalistic development for two reasons: Protestant ethics led to an ascetic life style which, instead of advocating affluence, reinvested the proceeds. As well, it is the basis of rationalism and goal achievement behaviour. While a value system which motivates economic development can hardly be limited to Protestantism Weber's stress on values and the resulting motivation influenced later thought.
In more recent times, Parsons and Smelser explained economic development as a result of tension and unrest in societies. If a traditional undifferentiated society experiences economic growth and economic differentiation as a result of external inputs, this leads to unrest. Frustration of groups of the population not & participating and gaining generates further differentiation and growth, and these small steps happen within relatively short times. McClelland sees the cause of underdevelopment in the absence of achievement motivation. The desire to do well to attain an inner feeling of personal accomplishment is the pre-requisite for innovative activity. Following McClelland's concept that a level of development is correlated with achievement motivation, Hagen tried to explain why this achievement motivation varies between societies and their classes and strata. He argues that in traditional societies the status of individuals is fixed. Children learn to act according to established norms, and deviations (initiative) are punished. If by external influences a new group gains power, the status of the old elite is challenged and weakened.

Perhaps one can say that the insecurity and frustration leads to changed behaviour in society which has consequences on the family structure the basic block of society. The young generations in families tend to become dissatisfied with society’s institutions and their contradictories with readily. The young generations develop new value system or accept existing alternative value systems. In time, they become innovative personalities, if these persons become dominant groups in the society, this causes economic development. Similar phenomena may happen as far as the changing situation of marginal groups or minorities is concerned.

3 comments:

  1. DRIVING FORCES FOR SOCIO-ECONOMIC CHANGE IS AN IMPORTANT FACTOR IN THE LIVES OF AN INDIVIDUALS INA HUMANSOCIETY..IT IS THE MOTIVE FORCE BEHIND THE HUMAN ACTIVITY..AS SUCH,MOST PEOPLE ARE DELUDED BY INSTANT PLEASURE,EASILY AVAILABLE FROM BITS OF TRANSIENT MATERIAL OBJECTS,WITHOUT CARING TO REMEMBER THAT SUCH CHANGE DOES NOT LAST LONG AND IS ALWAYS ACCOMPANIED BY AN EQUAL,AND SOMETIMES A GREATER,AMOUNT OF MISERY..LASTING CHANGE,LIES IN THE INFINITE ALONE,THE SELF,THE DRIVING FORCE...

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  2. HAS SOCIO-ECONOMIC FAILED?
    OR..Nations and regions are too strong to be subjected to the forces of market economy?
    HOW PROFOUNDLY HAS SOCIO-ECONOMIC IMPACTED VARIOUS STAGES OF OUR LIFE?
    IS THE THIRD WORLD AGENCY BACK?
    IS GLOBALIZATION REAL?WHETHER SOCIO-ECONOMIC STATUS?

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  3. The Global Market has tremendously shaped socio-economic structures. In the coming years, I think, and truly hope, that America, and other First World nations, will pull out of this "Global Economy" nonsense and go back to a more stable merchantile system.

    Right now, American academics have found that America is hemmorhaging money to Third World economies by as much as 5% per year on average. India alone processes over $40 billion in US tax returns alone. As a result, the value of college degrees in America are plummeting with there being more students in colleges than there are jobs waiting for them. A graduate degree is now paying what an associate degree was paying ten years ago. If inflation and cost of living factors are factored in, the associate degree ten years ago offered people more disposable income then than a graduate degree does now.

    For indigenous populations, which I primarily work in, we find that American Indians have a greater education level than any other racial group but they make less than any other racial group. Because of this, unemployment rates, suicide rates, drug abuse rates, etc. all are on the rise for Native Americans. Whatever the weakest racial group is seeing, the rest of the races in a dynamically diverse economy will also soon see. This affects the socio-economic structure.

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