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The dematerialization of economy - the analysis of the correlation between immaterial capital and sustainable development

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dc.contributor.author Mironiuc, Marilena
dc.date.accessioned 2024-12-02T11:31:35Z
dc.date.available 2024-12-02T11:31:35Z
dc.date.issued 2009
dc.identifier.citation Mironiuc, Marilena. 2009. "The dematerialization of economy - the analysis of the correlation between immaterial capital and sustainable development". Lucrări Ştiinţifice USAMV - Iaşi Seria Agronomie 52(2): 514-519.
dc.identifier.uri https://repository.iuls.ro/xmlui/handle/20.500.12811/4910
dc.description.abstract The consumption of material goods remains a strong engine of the economy producing goods and services, but having a destructive effect upon resources, until their exhaustion. For this reason, during the past two decades, the economy of developed countries evolves towards dematerialization, a path towards the sustainable development of the Western model. A shift has occurred from the economic system where the competitive advantages mainly depended on material and financial resources managed and controlled by companies to an economic system where performance is more and more conditioned by the complex of immaterial resources created through the previous corporate activity or to which they have access. The global economic system is therefore on the way of becoming one of “technological ideas and innovations”, where the potential of corporate “intellectual capital”, represented by: organizational knowledge and skills (organizational capital), staff loyalty and cohesion (human capital), company credibility (relational capital), becomes a competitive lever for economic survival. Corporate value is and will become more and more immaterial because economy itself follows this trend. The superiority of market value compared to the accounting value of a company (its goodwill) is often explained by the fact that it possesses and develops immaterial capital. By valuing this type of capital, it is possible to reduce or substitute the other means necessary to create wealth (human resources, technical means, financial resources, etc.). It is obvious that the changes that occur in the global society require enterprises to be socially responsible, preoccupied with excellence, social value, and investments in intelligence, in the larger context of knowledge management. en_US
dc.language.iso en en_US
dc.publisher “Ion Ionescu de la Brad” University of Agricultural Sciences and Veterinary Medicine, Iaşi en_US
dc.subject sustainable development en_US
dc.subject dematerialization of economy en_US
dc.title The dematerialization of economy - the analysis of the correlation between immaterial capital and sustainable development en_US
dc.type Article en_US
dc.author.affiliation Marilena Mironiuc, „Alexandru Ioan Cuza”, University of Iaşi
dc.publicationName Lucrări Ştiinţifice USAMV - Iaşi Seria Agronomie
dc.volume 52
dc.issue 2
dc.publicationDate 2009
dc.startingPage 514
dc.endingPage 519
dc.identifier.eissn 2069-6727


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