CONCEPT
The Entrepreneurial Function
Schumpeter's technical term for the specific economic role of introducing new combinations — distinct from invention, management, or capital provision — and the irreducible human element in economic development.
The entrepreneurial function, in Schumpeter's framework, is the act of introducing new combinations of already-existing factors of production into the economic structure. It is not invention — the scientist who discovers a principle does not perform the entrepreneurial function. It is not management — the administrator of existing operations does not either. It is not capital provision — the financier is distinct from the entrepreneur. The function is the act of deployment, of combining existing capabilities in a way that disrupts the existing arrangement. This function is what breaks the circular flow, triggers the gale, and drives the long-run transformation of economic structure. The AI era has both liberated the entrepreneurial function from its historical constraints and threatened it with eventual automation.
In The You On AI Field Guide
Schumpeter developed the concept in The Theory of Economic Development (1911), distinguishing it sharply from every other economic role. The distinction mattered because it identified what he considered the irreducible human element in economic change. Circular flow —