Industry 4.0-Relationship Between Capital Equipment and Labor Productivity

被引:2
作者
Marinic, Peter [1 ]
Pecina, Pavel [1 ]
机构
[1] Masaryk Univ, Brno, Czech Republic
来源
HRADEC ECONOMIC DAYS, VOL 11(1) | 2021年 / 11卷
关键词
economic development; economic indicators; labor productivity; capital equipment; Industry; 4.0;
D O I
10.36689/uhk/hed/2021-01-054
中图分类号
F [经济];
学科分类号
02 ;
摘要
Using new technology in production process is naturally connected with the economic development due to attempt to increase labor productivity and/or decrease in unit production costs. In last decades, term Industry 4.0 is used for such cases, as industrial revolution connected with new technology, especially information and communication technology, used in production process. Industry 4.0 is also connected with a fear of disappearing different kind of occupations replaced by new technology and with the fear of lack of employees in other occupations requiring suitable but not yet existing qualification. In the article we present the development of economic indicators and ratios based on production output, compensation on employees, capital equipment, volume of workers, and hours worked to illustrate development of labor productivity in 1995-2018 in Czech Republic, Slovakia, Poland, Hungary, Austria, and Germany. We present results about significant changes in economic structure in analyzed countries, but as results of economic development or economic transformation process. Thus, we try to articulate that the development is rather economic evolution than industrial revolution and that there is no reason to be afraid of Industry 4.0 process.
引用
收藏
页码:555 / 563
页数:9
相关论文
共 17 条
[1]  
Asadollahi-Yazdi E., 2020, American Journal of Operations Research, V10, DOI [10.4236/ajor.2020.106014, DOI 10.4236/AJOR.2020.106014]
[2]  
Beke E., 2020, Muszaki Tudomanyos Kozlemenyek, V13, P36, DOI [10.33894/mtk-2020.13.03, DOI 10.33894/MTK-2020.13.03]
[3]   Developing curriculum for industry 4.0: digital workplaces [J].
Brahma, Mita ;
Tripathi, Shiv S. ;
Sahay, Arunaditya .
HIGHER EDUCATION SKILLS AND WORK-BASED LEARNING, 2021, 11 (01) :144-163
[4]   Competition between human and artificial intellectual capital in production and distribution in Industry 4.0 [J].
Gashenko, Irina V. ;
Khakhonova, Natalia N. ;
Orobinskaya, Irina V. ;
Zima, Yulia S. .
JOURNAL OF INTELLECTUAL CAPITAL, 2020, 21 (04) :531-547
[5]  
Grencikova A., 2021, Business: Theory and Practice, V22, P29, DOI DOI 10.3846/BTP.2021.13166
[6]  
Grencikova A., 2020, Problems and Perspectives in Management, V18, P396, DOI DOI 10.21511/PPM.18(2).2020.32
[7]   THE RISE AND FALL OF INDUSTRIALISATION: THE CASE OF A SILK WEAVING DISTRICT IN MODERN JAPAN [J].
Hashino, Tomoko ;
Otsuka, Keijiro .
AUSTRALIAN ECONOMIC HISTORY REVIEW, 2020, 60 (01) :46-72
[8]  
Kurt Resul, 2019, Procedia Computer Science, V158, P590, DOI 10.1016/j.procs.2019.09.093
[9]   VOCATIONAL-TRAINING AND PRODUCTIVITY PERFORMANCE - AN ANGLO-DUTCH COMPARISON [J].
MASON, G ;
VANARK, B .
INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF MANPOWER, 1994, 15 (05) :55-69
[10]  
Pecina P, 2017, INTED PROC, P2089