CONCEPT
Rationalization
Schumpeter's term — borrowed from Max Weber but given specifically economic content — for the progressive systematization of economic functions that eventually automates every routinizable operation, including, he feared, innovation itself.
Rationalization, in Schumpeter's framework, is the progressive conversion of unstructured activity into systematic procedure. It is the mechanism by which capitalism bureaucratizes itself — turns the improvisation of early firms into the methodical operations of mature corporations. Schumpeter's distinctive prediction was that rationalization would not stop at the
managerial function. It would eventually reach
the entrepreneurial function itself, replacing the individual visionary with teams of specialists exploring possibility spaces methodically. The prediction was only partially correct about corporate R&D it has been dramatically confirmed by AI, which represents rationalization in a form Schumpeter could not have imagined but whose mechanism his framework precisely anticipated.
In The You On AI Field Guide
Schumpeter inherited the concept from Weber's sociology of modern capitalism, where rationalization named the disenchantment of the world through calculation, bureaucracy, and systematic procedure. Schumpeter's innovation was to apply the concept specifically to the question of what happens to the entrepreneur in a fully rationalized economy.
The prediction had two parts. First, corporate