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Draft:Time Capital

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Definition

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In a broad sense, time capital designates any temporal assets or resources that can be strategically managed, invested, or exchanged to generate returns.[1] Time capital refers to a concept where time itself is treated as a commodity, as something that can be quantified, bought, sold, or optimized under market rationales. According to this view, time is no longer just a measure of human experience or natural cycles but becomes a resource that holds economic or symbolic value.

In a narrow sense, time capital is a measure of sustainability and durability that represents the temporal resources and actionable capacities of individuals, groups, or societies.[2] It is a numerical and operationalized metric of durability that quantifies the generic capacity to act, thereby serving as an estimation of an emerging ability to perform actions.[3] Time capital acts as a “performative abstraction”[4] that integrates and governs the potential to manage and mobilize both tangible and intangible resources to accomplish a goal.[5]

Time capital can be understood as a concept analogous to economic capital, social capital, and cultural capital. Just as economic capital relates to wealth, social capital to networks and relationships, and cultural capital to knowledge, education, and skills, time capital focuses on the potential and benefits gained from the strategic allocation and use of time to generate value.[6] Therefore, time capital is an integral element interwoven with other forms of capital in shaping societal dynamics and personal opportunities. However, time capital is the foundational resource, beyond which all other forms of capital lose significance; various types of capital are relevant only when matched with the time capital of individuals or collectivities.[7]

History

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Time capital is a powerful social imaginary of modernity that emerged through historical shifts driven by changes in social, cultural, and technological contexts, culminating in its integration into the digital, data-driven economies of today.[8] The evolution of time illustrates a trajectory from nature-bound cyclicality to the economic and technological commodification of time. The commodification of time is seen as a process initiated by industrial capitalism, forming the foundation of the concept of time capital. The notion of time as a form of capital emerged when time was standardized to enhance productivity and profit in the factory system. This shift was further reinforced by a cultural emphasis on planning and coordination to achieve long-term goals, embedding time as a valuable resource within organizational and societal structures.[9]

Applications

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Strategic management

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In strategic management, time capital is a resource that amplifies organizational effectiveness, drives competitive advantage, and ensures sustainable growth. In general, the management of time capital is approached as a distinctive component of strategic management, as it ensures that time is allocated efficiently to achieve strategic objectives in an organizational life cycle that starts with birth and growth and leads to corporatism and global presence.[10] Time management frameworks (such as Gantt Charts, Pomodoro technique, project management software) perform a capitalization of time that leads to personalising productivity and enhanced neoliberal self-discipline.[11]

Public policy

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The concept of time capital is a valuable lens for analyzing public policy, particularly when viewed through the framework of government. When time capital is applied in this context, it highlights how states regulate populations by managing life, health, and human potential[12]: time capital is also managed at the macro level, with governments incentivizing earlier childbearing, later retirements, or migration to optimize demographic time allocations.

Time capital is applied in various areas of public policies such as:

  • Pension systems essentially redistribute time capital. By providing financial support in old age, states enable individuals to “bank” their productive time from earlier years and “withdraw” it in retirement. In this case, social investment in human capital, public services and different policies related to the retirement age leads to an accumulation of time capital both at an individual and macrosocial level.[13]
  • Policies promoting preventive healthcare (e.g., vaccinations, fitness campaigns) are understood as biopolitical mechanisms to maximize population-wide time capital by reducing periods of illness. Time capital is framed as a rhetorical resource in demonstrating vaccine efficacy and safety, thus being mobilized and materialized as an affective and epistemic form of capital within the domain of public science communication.[14]
  • Policies that emphasize young adult education and lifelong learning view time spent in education as an investment in future time capital. Younger and middle-aged professionals act as agents of social acceleration, highlighting the role of time capital in navigating modern demands.[15]

Algorithmic interventions

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Time capital provides a conceptual framework for understanding how various processes of convertibility are put to work in the digital worlds.[16][17] For example, algorithms designed to minimize the time required for tasks, such as sorting, searching, or data processing, reflect the principle of maximizing time capital through optimized machine learning methods, such as Bayesian Tuned Support Vector Machine and Bayesian Tuned Gaussian Process Regression.[18] Specifically, various algorithms are designed to optimize time capital by automating repetitive tasks or scheduling them efficiently, thus creating a spatiotemporal architecture put to work under platform capitalism.[19] Algorithms that analyze patterns over time imagine time as auditable and therefore can predict bottlenecks or inefficiencies, enabling pre-emptive interventions on time capital.[20] Moreover, algorithms used in financial trading treat time capital as a central variable, where even milliseconds matter.[21]

Personal development

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The concept of time capital is integral to personal development, as it treats time as a finite resource that can be measured, invested, and optimized to achieve individual goals. The Quantified Self Movement—which involves an individualizing process of commodification and control through technologies used to track and analyze personal data—amplifies this approach by offering tools to measure and optimize time capital usage for growth and well-being.[22]

Criticism

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The concept of time capital faces several critiques rooted in how time is socially constructed, experienced, and valued.

Time capital frames time as a resource akin to money, treating it as something to be accumulated, invested, and maximized for returns. However, time is not essentially so, but it is socially constructed as such in a cultural process that had changed the ways of relating time to wage, seasonality, place, and finance.[23] Time capital is a social fiction and a cultural invention since not all societies view time as a resource. For example, indigenous communities or cultures with cyclical conceptions of time may see the idea of “time capital” as incompatible with their worldview.[24]

Treating time as a form of capital risks prioritizing productivity over other human experiences, such as leisure, relationships, or community-building. Social constructivists argue that this mindset reinforces a capitalist logic that devalues non-economic uses of time, highlighting the mismatch between human decision-making timelines and the slow, cumulative impacts of various other processes.[25]

The idea of time capital universalizes a specific, Western, industrial understanding of time, marginalizing alternative ways of conceptualizing and valuing time. The framing of time as a capital resource often reflects and reinforces existing power structures, where institutions (e.g., governments, employers, or tech companies) regulate and control how individuals use their time.[26] Societies or subcultures that reject capitalist notions of time optimization (e.g., slow living movements, indigenous temporalities, or religious sabbaths) are often marginalized or dismissed within the frameworks of time capital.[27]

References

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  1. ^ Preda, Marian (2013). "Time Capital and Social Gravity: Two New Concepts for Sociology of Time". In Birani, Bianca; Smith, Thomas (eds.). Body and Time: Bodily Rhythms and Social Synchronism in the Digital Media Society. Newcastle upon Tyne: Cambridge Scholars Publishing. p. 34.
  2. ^ Preda, Marian; Matei, Ștefania (2020). "Time Capital in Strategic Planning and Sustainable Management". Transylvanian Review of Administrative Sciences. 16 (61): 10.
  3. ^ Preda & Matei, 2020:107.
  4. ^ Matei, Ștefania; Preda, Marian (2019). "When Social Knowledge Turns Mathematical - The Role of Formalisation in the Sociology of Time". Time & Society. 28 (1): 513. doi:10.1177/0961463X17752279.
  5. ^ Preda & Matei, 2020:108.
  6. ^ Preda, 2013, p.34.
  7. ^ Preda & Matei, 2020:108.
  8. ^ Matei, Ștefania; Preda, Marian (2020). "Time Capital as a Social Imaginary" (PDF). Journal of Comparative Research in Anthropology and Sociology. 11 (1): 51-58.
  9. ^ Matei & Preda, 2020:53-54.
  10. ^ Suresh Kumar, P. M.; Aithal, Sreeramana (2020). "Time as a Strategic Resource in Management of Organizations". ICTACT Journal on Management Studies. 6 (1): 1140.
  11. ^ Pedersen, Louise; Muhr, Sara Michael; Dunne, Stephen (2024). "Time Management between the Personalisation and Collectivisation of Productivity: The Case of Adopting the Pomodoro Time-Management Tool in a Four-Day Workweek Company". Time & Society. 33 (4): 417. doi:10.1177/0961463X241258303.
  12. ^ Braun, Kathrin (2007). "Biopolitics and Temporality in Arendt and Foucault" (PDF). Time & Society. 16 (1): 5–23. doi:10.1177/0961463X07074099.
  13. ^ Kuitto, Kati; Helmdag, Jan (2021). "Extending Working Lives: How Policies Shape Retirement and Labour Market Participation of Older Workers". Social Policy and Administration. 55 (3): 423. doi:10.1111/spol.12717.
  14. ^ Harrison, Mia; Lancaster, Kari; Rhodes, Tim (2022). "'A Matter of Time': Evidence-Making Temporalities of Vaccine Development in the COVID-19 Media Landscape". Time & Society. 31 (1): 132–154. doi:10.1177/0961463X211032201. PMC 9008469. PMID 35440859.
  15. ^ Kalmus, Veronika; Opermann, Signe (2020). "Personal Time Capital in the Digital Society: An Alternative Look at Social Stratification Among Three Generations of Highly Skilled Professionals In Estonia". TRAMES: A Journal of the Humanities & Social Sciences. 24 (74/69): 3. doi:10.3176/tr.2020.1.01.
  16. ^ Gómez, Daniel Calderón (2021). "The Third Digital Divide and Bourdieu: Bidirectional Conversion of Economic, Cultural, and Social Capital to (and from) Digital Capital among Young People in Madrid". New Media & Society. 23 (9): 2534–2553. doi:10.1177/1461444820933252.
  17. ^ Lundahl, Outi (2022). "Algorithmic Meta-Capital: Bourdieusian Analysis of Social Power through Algorithms in Media Consumption". Information Communication and Society. 25 (10): 1440–1455. doi:10.1080/1369118X.2020.1864006.
  18. ^ Ozden, Erdemalp; Guleryuz, Didem (2022). "Optimized Machine Learning Algorithms for Investigating the Relationship Between Economic Development and Human Capital". Computational Economics. 60: 347. doi:10.1007/s10614-021-10194-7.
  19. ^ Duss, Katrine; Bruun, Maja Hojer; Dalsgård, Anne Line (2023). "Riders in App Time: Exploring the Temporal Experiences of Food Delivery Platform Work". Time & Society. 32 (2): 190. doi:10.1177/0961463X231161849.
  20. ^ Erickson, Ingrid; Wajcman, Judy (2023). "Optimizing Temporal Capital: How Big Tech Imagines Time as Auditable". American Behavioral Scientist. 67 (11): 1755.
  21. ^ MacKenzie, Donald (2021). Trading at the Speed of Light. How Ultrafast Algorithms Are Transforming Financial Markets. Princeton University Press.
  22. ^ Pitts, Frederick Harry; Jean, Eleanor; Clarke, Yas (2020). "Sonifying the Quantified Self: Rhythmanalysis and Performance Research in and against the Reduction of Life-Time to Labour-Time". Capital & Class. 44 (2): 235. doi:10.1177/0309816819873370. hdl:1983/c87736ce-7841-4795-a5ce-0a891e9e6be7.
  23. ^ Birth, Kevin (2022). "Capital Flows, Itinerant Laborers, and Time: A Revision of Thompson's Thesis of Time and Work Discipline". Time & Society. 31 (3): 392. doi:10.1177/0961463X221083185.
  24. ^ Birth, Kevin (2017). Time Blind. Problems in Perceiving Other Temporalities. New York: Palgrave Macmillan.
  25. ^ Adam, Barbara (2005). Timescapes of Modernity: The Environment and Invisible Hazards. London & New York: Routledge.
  26. ^ Strzelecka, Celina (2022). "Time Paradoxes of Neoliberalism: How Time Management Applications Change the Way We Live". Time and Society. 31 (2): 286–287. doi:10.1177/0961463X211059727.
  27. ^ Bryson, Valerie (2007). "Time Culture(s) and the Social Nature of Time". In Bryson, Valerie (ed.). Gender and the Politics of time. Feminist Theory and Contemporary Debates. Bristol: The Policy Press. pp. 23–34.