Global Journal of Management and Business Research, B: Economics and Commerce, Volume 21 Issue 5
In fact, they can be interpreted as the price of the fallacy of all the previous practice of national governments that provided rapid growth and optimizing economic output at the expense of underestimating the priority of creating a sustainable public health system. Such misunderstanding of the subordination of the goals of ensuring the health and well-being of citizens and economic growth rates at any cost largely predetermined the transcendental inefficiency of the state in the context of the COVID-19 pandemic, as well as of the societal crisis. In practice, this turned into a catastrophic collapse of the global economy and the destruction of the societal integrity of national communities. In the context of the coronavirus pandemic, distrust of the state takes the form of citizens deliberately violating the emergency regimes imposed by states to fight infection; unwillingness to get vaccinated against coronavirus, etc. However, the most destructive for a self-developing society is the phenomenon of the formation of a social stratum among young people, which is structured as a new social class called "precariat" (Standing, 2011). And in the last decade, an extreme form of its manifestation has arisen in a new specific social community – NEET (Not in Employment, Education or Training) (Fig. 4). If the share of these young citizens (from 15 to 29 years old) reaches a quarter of all youth (as in Italy), then the integrity of society has every reason for destruction, since they do not have a permanent place of study or work, they shy away from professional training (IPSOS, 2021). In other words, these young people ignore society and try to minimize their contacts with it. Source: OECD (2021), Government at a Glance 2021, OECD Publishing, Paris, https://doi.org/10.1787/1c25 8f55-en Figure 4: Percentage of young people (aged 15-29) years not in education, employment or training (2009 and 2020) Third, the COVID-19 pandemic has exposed such a paradoxical situation as the growing surplus of the labor force of obsolete qualifications and the catastrophic widening of the gap between the demand for workers meeting the requirements of the technological revolution 4.0 and their supply. In a pandemic, this gap threatens with missed opportunities for countries of the world, whose human capital, in terms of education parameters, is not ready to form a new technological base for the dynamic economy and society ex post pandemic. In other words, the essential problem that predetermines all crises that have manifested themselves as a result of the COVID-19 pandemic is associated with a person who played a subordinate role in self-organizing systems before the pandemic, but without whom it is impossible to realize their dialectical leap into the future post-covid reality. Socialization of humans and synchronization of self-movement processes in the economy, society and technology The authors assigned such a significant place to the socialization of citizens in modern self-organizing systems since their study of the peculiarities of the implementation of dialectical laws in the economy (Pilipenko, et al., 2021b) made it possible to single out the object's, process and subject's components of system formation. The object component is represented by material and non-material objects of market exchange, and the process component is manifested in the self-organization and self-development of systemic integrities. But the subjective component turns out to be the most complex, unpredictable and most important in mediating the interaction of all human-created system integrities – in the economy, society and technology. In Uncertainty of the Post-Covid Future: How will Humanity Solve this Puzzle? © 2021 Global Journals 52 Global Journal of Management and Business Research Volume XXI Issue V Version I Year 2021 ( ) B
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