Schumpeteresque
Jump to navigation
Jump to search
English
[edit]Etymology
[edit]From Schumpeter + -esque.
Adjective
[edit]Schumpeteresque (comparative more Schumpeteresque, superlative most Schumpeteresque)
- Schumpeterian
- 2020, Marcus Gilroy-Ware, After the Fact?, Repeater, →ISBN:
- More than the much-remarked squeeze on working-class jobs in areas of the economy such as manufacturing, [Edward] Luttwak saw an accelerated “creative destruction” affecting clerical jobs in white-collar data-heavy industries such as banking that were being disrupted by capital's “Schumpeteresque” technology-assisted modernisation as they were digitised.