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Intellectual capital is a term with various definitions in different theories of economics. Accordingly its only truly neutral definition is as a debate over economic " intangibles". Ambiguous combinations of instructional capital and individual capital employed in productive enterprise are usually what is meant by the term, when it is used to actually refer to a capital asset whose yield is intellectual rights.

Such use is rare, however, and the term rarely or never appears in accounting proper - it refers to a debate, and to the assumed capital base that creates intellectual property, rather than an auditable style of capital.

Perhaps due to their industry focus, the term "intellectual capital" is employed mostly by theorists in information technology, innovation research , technology transfer and other fields concerned primarily with technology, standards, and venture capital. It was particularly prevalent in 1995-2000 as theories proliferated to explain the " dotcom boom" and high valuations. During this period it was often observed that code (instructions) and coders (talented individuals) were bearing a substantial premium when combined in new unproven companies. It is hard to see how this differs from the tulip boom, however, when it would have been just as likely to assign a high value to the seemingly-magical combinations of tulip bulbs and, say, the pots they grew in.

1 A transitional term

Because there is little agreement on how the intellectual is an asset, it is not clear if the term has a future in the field, or will be subsumed by other ideas, e.g. brand capital - social trust that exists only via owned instructions - an intangible. Baruch Lev documents "brand" as a new (seventh) form of capital. This seems to violate classical microeconomics basic model of the factors of production - and likely require major rethinking of microeconomics and political economyPolitical economy was the original term for the study of relations of production, especially between the three main classes of capitalist (or bourgeois) society: capitalists, workers and landowners. In contradistinction to the theory of the physiocrats, i.

The anti-globalization movement and green economists seem to broadly share a critique of "brand" documented by Naomi KleinNaomi Klein (born 1970) is a Canadian journalist, author and activist. She was born in Montreal, Quebec, and now lives in Toronto. Klein wrote the book No Logo ( 2000), which became a manifesto of the anti-globalization movement. She has also written Fenc in her book " No LogoNo Logo: Taking Aim at the Brand Bullies a controversial book written by Canadian journalist Naomi Klein, first appeared in January 2000. The book focusses on branding, and often makes connections with the anti-globalization movement. Throughout the four" - although from an economics viewpoint their proposals for mandatory labellingMandatory labelling of consumer products enables moral purchasing and avoidance of health problems like allergies. It is mandated in most developed nations, and increasingly in developing nations, especially for food products, e. Grade A" meats. In China schemes and a retrenchment of national sovereignty (so called "brand versus flag" or "brand versus label" debates) seem to validate Lev's assumption that brand does in fact add genuine value: a flag, or a brand, or a label, economically, all signify social trust, albeit with different procedures of complaint, recourse, and enforcement.

Brand and intellectual capital debates are generally inseparable from larger debates on role of corporations and governments, and larger debates among anthropologists, primatologists and sociologists on imitation versus creativity in shaping human behavior. This article will avoid the larger political economy questions and deal with these only as required to explain the focus of intellectual capital theory, that being the relative valuation and balanced growth of:



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