THE MAIN TRENDS IN THE DEVELOPMENT OF INDUSTRY 4.0 AND ITS IMPACT ON THE ECONOMIC SECURITY OF THE STATE: AN INTERNATIONAL ASPECT

Authors

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.31732/2663-2209-2022-69-52-59

Keywords:

digitalization of society, industry 4.0, economic security of the state, threats

Abstract

The development of information technologies in recent decades requires active reforms in the digitization of all processes and the adaptation of the population to them from individual individuals, enterprises and organizations, as well as from states. Issues related to the emergence of potential threats to the economic security of the state attract special attention in this regard. The purpose of the article is to analyze the main trends in the development of industry 4.0 on an international scale and establish its impact on the economic security of the state by identifying potential threats to its development. The methodological basis of the study is the analysis of the results presented by the European Commission in its report "Digital Economy and Society Index (DESI)", which is developed annually to monitor the digital progress of member states. The article examines the features of the Fourth Industrial Revolution and Industry 4.0, which made it possible to clarify the main directions of the development of society: the formation of digital competences and the development of human capital; formation of digital infrastructure; integration of digital technologies in business and everyday life; improvement of digital public services. Finland, Denmark, the Netherlands and Sweden have the most developed digital economies in the EU, followed by Ireland, Malta and Spain. Romania, Bulgaria and Greece have the lowest DESI scores. Estonia, Finland, Malta and the Netherlands have the highest scores for digital public services in the DESI, while Romania and Greece have the lowest. The main results of the conducted research are the identification and systematization of potential threats to the economic security of the state, the occurrence of which can negatively affect its development. It was established that the main threats to the economic security of the state during Industry 4.0 are: the absence or insufficient level of digital competences; high cost of software development; non-acceptance of digital innovations by society; cyber attacks; sources of personal data; falsification of data, etc. A detailed study of the specified threats and their impact on the economic security of the state can become a direction of further research.

Downloads

Download data is not yet available.

Author Biography

Iryna Mihus, KROK University

Doctor of science (Economics), Professor, Professor of the department of financial and economic security management department, "KROK" University, Ukraine

References

Lasi H, Fettke P, Kemper HG, Feld T, HoffmannM(2014) Industry 4.0. Bus Inf Syst Eng 6:239–242

Chen B, Wan J, Shu L, Li P, Mukherjee M, Yin B (2017) Smart factory of Industry 4.0: key technologies, application case, and challenges. IEEE Access 6:6506–6519

Pereira AC, Romero F (2017) A review of the meanings and the implications of the Industry 4.0 concept. Procedia Manuf 13:1206–1214

Vaidya S, Ambad P, Bhosle S (2018) Industry 4.0—a glimpse. Procedia Manuf 20:233–238

RoblekV,MeskoM,KrapezA(2016)Acomplex viewof Industry 4.0. SAGE Open 2:1–11

Xu LD, Xu EL, Li L (2018) Industry 4.0: state of the art and future trends. Int J Prod Res 56(8):2941–2962

Zhong RY, Xu X, Klotz E, Newman ST (2017) Intelligent manufacturing in the context of Industry 4.0: a review. Engineering 3:616–630

Lu Y (2017) Industry 4.0: a survey on technologies, applications and open research issues. J Ind Inf Integr 6:1–10

Lukac D (2015) The fourth ICT-based industrial revolution “Industry 4.0”—HMI and the case of CAE/CAD innovation with EPLAN P8. In: 2015 23rd Telecommunications forum Telfor (TELFOR). IEEE, New York, pp 835–838

Cordes, F.; Stacey, N. Is UK Industry Ready for the Fourth Industrial Revolution? The Boston Consulting Group: Boston, MA, USA, 2017.

Li, G.; Hou, Y.;Wu, A. Fourth Industrial Revolution: Technological drivers, impacts and coping methods. Chin. Geogr. Sci. 2017, 27, 626–637.

Thoben, K.-D.; Wiesner, S.; Wuest, T. “Industrie 4.0” and Smart Manufacturing—A Review of Research Issues and Application Examples. Int. J. Autom. Technol. 2017, 11, 4–16.

Sommer, L. Industrial revolution-Industry 4.0: Are German manufacturing SMEs the first victims of this revolution? J. Ind. Eng. Manag. 2015, 8, 1512–1532.

Buguin, J.; Dobbs, R.; Bisson, P.; Marrs, A. Disruptive Technologies: Advances That Will Transform Life, Business, and the Global Economy; McKinsey Global Institute: San Francisco, CA, USA, 2013.

Schwab, K. The Fourth Industrial Revolution; World Economic Forum: Geneva, Switzerland, 2016; ISBN 9781944835002.

Rüßmann, M.; Lorenz, M.; Gerbert, P.; Waldner, M.; Justus, J.; Engel, P.; Harnisch, M. Industry 4.0: The Future of Productivity and Growth in Manufacturing Industries; The Boston Consulting Group, Inc.: Boston, MA, USA, 2015.

Mosconi, M. The New European Industrial Policy; Routledge: London, UK, 2015; ISBN 9781315761756.

Rodiˇc, B. Industry 4.0 and the New Simulation Modelling Paradigm. Organizacija 2017, 50.

Pan, M.; Sikorski, J.; Kastner, C.A.; Akroyd, J.; Mosbach, S.; Lau, R.; Kraft, M. Applying Industry 4.0 to the Jurong Island Eco-industrial Park. Energy Procedia 2015, 75, 1536–1541.

Kovacs, G.; Kot, S. New Logistics and Production Trends as the Effect of Global Economy Changes. Pol. J. Manag. Stud. 2016, 14, 115–126.

Glas, A.H.; Kleemann, F.C. The impact of industry 4.0 on procurement and supply management: A conceptual and qualitative analysis. Int. J. Bus. Manag. Invent. 2015, 5, 55–66.

Brettel, M.; Friederichsen, N.; Keller, M.; Rosenberg, M. How virtualization, decentralization and network building change the manufacturing landscape: An Industry 4.0 Perspective. Int. J. Sci. Eng. Technol. 2014, 8, 37–44.

Lee, J.; Kao, H.-A.; Yang, S. Service Innovation and Smart Analytics for Industry 4.0 and Big Data Environment. Procedia CIRP 2014, 16, 3–8.

Schuh, G.; Potente, T.; Wesch-Potente, C.; Weber, A.R.; Prote, J.P. Collaboration Mechanisms to increase Productivity in the Context of Industrie 4.0. In Proceedings of the19th Robust Manufacturing Conference (CIRP), Bremen, Germany, 7–9 July 2014; pp. 51–56.

Barata, J.; Rupino Da Cunha, P.; Stal, J. Mobile supply chain management in the Industry 4.0 era. J. Enterp. Inf. Manag. 2018, 31, 173–192.

Liao, Y.; Deschamps, F.; Loures, E.D.; Ramos, L.F.P. Past, present and future of Industry 4.0—A systematic literature review and research agenda proposal. Int. J. Prod. Res. 2017, 55, 3609–3629.

Mihus, I., & Koval, Y. (2021). Innovative development of enterprises in the conditions of digitalization of the economy. Science Notes of KROK University, (2 (62), 159–165. https://doi.org/10.31732/2663-2209-2021-62-159-165

Digital Economy and Society Index (DESI) 2022 URL: https://digital-strategy.ec.europa.eu/en/library/digital-economy-and-society-index-desi-2022.

Published

2023-03-30

How to Cite

Mihus, I. (2023). THE MAIN TRENDS IN THE DEVELOPMENT OF INDUSTRY 4.0 AND ITS IMPACT ON THE ECONOMIC SECURITY OF THE STATE: AN INTERNATIONAL ASPECT. Science Notes of KROK University, (1(69), 52–59. https://doi.org/10.31732/2663-2209-2022-69-52-59