InnovationAug 15, 2023
Long Waves: The History of Innovation Cycles
Creative destruction plays a key role in entrepreneurship and economic development. Coined by economist Joseph Schumpeter in 1942, the theory of “creative destruction” suggests that business cycles operate under long waves of innovation. Specifically, as markets are disrupted, key clusters of industries have outsized effects on the economy.
Take the railway industry, for example. At the turn of the 19th century, railways completely reshaped urban demographics and trade. Similarly, the internet disrupted entire industries—from media to retail.
The above infographic shows how innovation cycles have impacted economies since 1785, and what’s next for the future.
See the full article on visualcapitalist.com
Dataset
First Wave | Second Wave | Third Wave | Fourth Wave | Fifth Wave | Sixth Wave |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Water power, textiles, iron | Steam power, rail, steel | Electricity, chemicals, internal-combustion engine | Petrochemicals, electronics, aviation | Digital network, software, new media | AI, IoT, robotics and drones, clean tech |
60 years | 55 years | 50 years | 40 years | 30 years | 25 years |
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