ABSTRACT

The post-economic revolution is the beginning rather than the culmination of the formation of the bases of post-economic society. In economic and sociological theory, the market economy and commodity production are often viewed as identical phenomena. The majority of economists and sociologists in the 1960s and 1970s regarded post-industrial society as a system in which material production assigns the role of the main economic sector to the production of services and information. The meaning of information as a primary economic resource is associated with the gigantic growth in the role of the organization of the production process. Social philosophers for decades and even centuries believed that the main way of displacing private property was to create social or collective forms of ownership over the means of production. State property has a special place in the economic structure of modern society. State property clearly contrasts corporate property and the personal property of citizens.