Conglomerates and the evolution of capitalism

Bibliographic Information

Conglomerates and the evolution of capitalism

by Charles R. Spruill

(Political and social economy series)

Southern Illinois University Press, c1982

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Note

Bibliography: p. [172]-180

Includes index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

What motivates a firm to become a conglomerate? How do conglomerates change the structure of the economy? What effects do conglomerates have on both output and labor markets? How do conglomerates affect the evolution of capitalism?These questions motivated Spruill to write his book. He had noted an insatiable appetite on the part of large firms to become larger and more diversified. For instance, Gulf and Western had expanded to the point where its product lines included auto parts, aerospace, electronics, minerals, and movies. Beatrice Foods produced, among other things, ice cream, peanuts, and toilet seats. Spruill s book contains a wider scope than that of any other economist surveying the emergence of conglomerates. After tracing the history of capitalism and its evolution into the conglomerate movement in chapter 1, he delves into the reasons firms diversify in chapter 2. His third chapter offers new data concerning the degree of diversification in the manufacturing sector of the economy.Chapter 4" "focuses on the power relationship between labor unions and conglomerate firms; conglomerates erode union power, and the unions are fighting back. Chapter 5 is an institutional analysis of the evolution of capitalism, concentrating on the nature of the economic system in light of its progression from Jeffersonian capitalism to monopoly capitalism to conglomerate capitalism. Chapter 6 discusses reasons for government vacillation in implementing policy concerning conglomerates.The Federal Trade Commission and the Justice Department are daily embroiled in conglomerate merger activities: the questions and issues confronted by these agencies are the questions and issues Spruill confronts in this book."

by "Nielsen BookData"

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