The Structure of European industry
Author(s)
Bibliographic Information
The Structure of European industry
(Studies in industrial organization, v. 1)
Martinus Nijhoff , Distributors, Kluwer Boston, 1981
- : hbk
- : pbk
Available at / 50 libraries
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Research Institute for Economics & Business Administration (RIEB) Library , Kobe University図書
: pbk338.094-35081000062518
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Note
Includes bibliographies and index
Contents of Works
- Concentration and competition in food and drinks manufacturing and distribution / Remo Linda
- The European beer industry / Maria T. Brouwer
- The pulp and paper industry / Fabio Gobbo
- The cement industry / Patrizio Bianchi, Dennis Colenutt, and Denys Gribbin
- Structure and performance in the West European steel industry / Bo Carlsson
- Hard coal mining in the EEC countries, especially in Germany / Hans Otto Lenel
- The automobile industry / William James Adams
- Competition and economic power in the pharmaceutical industry / Henk Wouter de Jong
- The aerospace industry / Keith Hartley
- The computer and data processing industry / M. Delapierre, L.A. Gérard-Varet, and J.B. Zimmermann
- Public enterprise in Western Europe and the United States / William G. Shepherd
Description and Table of Contents
Description
The Structure of European Industry is a collection of essays on the economic organization of industrial sectors in Europe, which may serve either of policy makers in business and in Government; and staff and students at Universities. The first group increasingly needs a focus on the longer-term developments of European industry, now that the positive (growth) effects of the economic integration of the sixties have worn off. Restructuring is the current catch word and nobody can deny the necessity and urgency of the task. But it has become a day-to-day affair and there may be a loss of perspective. The second group is growing up in an international environment and should be equipped accordingly. Many-faceted tasks are involved with serving either depending on the problems which differ according to industries. And here the bewildering complexity of the European industrial scenery strikes. Some of these industries are old fashioned; some are new; some are national in orientation; some have become integrated; some have a competitive structure; some are cartellized or heavily concentrated; some have been interfered with by national Governments, others were free from such policing; etc. Moreover, a number of industries show various combinations of these and other facets at the same time.
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