The explicit economics of knowledge codification and tacitness

2000 Industrial and Corporate Change 1,235 citations

Abstract

This paper attempts a greater precision and clarity of understanding concerning the nature and economic significance of knowledge and its variegated forms by presenting 'the skeptical economist's guide to 'tacit knowledge''. It critically reconsiders the ways in which the concepts of tacitness and codification have come to be employed by economists and develops a more coherent re-conceptualization of these aspects of knowledge production and distribution activities. It seeks also to show that a proposed alternative framework for the study of knowledge codification activities offers a more useful guide for further research directed to informing public policies for science, technological innovation and long-run economic growth.

Keywords

ConceptualizationCLARITYTacit knowledgeSkepticismProduction (economics)EconomicsPositive economicsBusinessKnowledge managementEpistemologyMicroeconomicsComputer science

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Publication Info

Year
2000
Type
article
Volume
9
Issue
2
Pages
211-253
Citations
1235
Access
Closed

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Cite This

Robin Cowan (2000). The explicit economics of knowledge codification and tacitness. Industrial and Corporate Change , 9 (2) , 211-253. https://doi.org/10.1093/icc/9.2.211

Identifiers

DOI
10.1093/icc/9.2.211