Title: BIG BUSINESS EMERGES
1CHAPTER 6 SECTION 3 BIG BUSINESS EMERGES
2Objective
- To understand Social Darwinism, the rise of big
business, and the governments attempts to
regulate big business
3BILL GATES- Founder Microsoft Most successful
company in the history of the world.
4Costing 97 million It took seven years to build
the 40,000-square-foot mansion on a wooded
five-acre compound in the moneyed Seattle suburb
of Medina
5Carnegies Innovations
- Andrew Carnegie was an immigrant who received
employment at the Pennsylvania Railroad. - Carnegie became wealthy by investing in the
stock market. - In 1873 Carnegie opened a steel factory.
- Carnegies steel factories by 1899 were
producing more steel than the entire nation of
Great Britain.
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7 8Vanderbilts on 52nd
- Homes from millionaires row
9William Vanderbilt
10Vanderbilt MansionHyde Park, NY
11- Biltmore Estate Summer home of the Vanderbilt
family
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13Library
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15Winery
16Gardens
17Carnegies Management Techniques
- Carnegies success was due to his management
techniques, that were borrowed by other
companies. - 1. cut production costs- making goods cheaper.
- latest production techniques and machines.
- 2. Hired best people to improve the quality of
his steel.
18- Maintained detailed accounting methods to track
the production costs of each process and item. - Forced company executives to continue finding new
ways to cut production costs.
19Business Strategies
- Carnegie also wanted to create a monopoly of the
steel industry. - Carnegie created a monopoly through the process
of vertical integration.
- buying out all his suppliers
- control of every stage of manufacturing process
20- Carnegie also attempted to create a monopoly
through horizontal integration. - Buy out all competitors.
- When Carnegie sold his company in 1901 Carnegie
Steel produced 80 of nations steel.
21Andrew Carnegie
22Social Darwinism and Business
- Carnegie explained his success through hard work
and innovation. - Social philosophers explained Carnegies success
through Social Darwinism.
23Principles of Social Darwinism
- Charles Darwins theories of evolution and
natural selection.
- Through natural selection only strong would
reproduce and survive.
- BUSSINESS- only strong businesses would profit in
free market and the weak would go under or be
bought out.
24The Popularity of Social Darwinism
- Social Darwinism was accepted widely.
- 4000 new millionaires
- SUCCESS- Protestant work ethic, wealth was gods
grace, you earned it through hard work- if you
were poor your lazy - Horatio Alger- Popular literature- rags-to
riches stories- no shame in being poor as long as
you work hard you will become successful
25Fewer Control More
- key to capitalism/free market competition
- Most economists and businessmen argued for
support of laissez faire principles, but
secretly undermined competition.
- Businessmen not only wanted to restrict
competition but wanted to eliminate competition.
26Growth and Consolidation
- oligopoly is a market dominated by only a few
sellers. - Oligopolies were created by companies producing
similar products joining together or merging. - Small companies that did not compete well with
larger companies often voluntarily accepted a
merger.
27- Fair competition was further restrained by the
formation of monopolies.
- monopoly is company that controls 90 or more of
the market of a particular product. - has complete control of a industrys production,
quality, wages, and prices.
28- monopolies were formed by holding companies.
- Holding companies- corporation that existed only
to buy stock of industrial competitors. - J.P. Morgan bought out Carnegie Steel 500
million and resulting monopolistic company was
known as United States Steel Corporation.
29- Some monopolies were formed by trusts.
- Trust- agreement by stockholders to transfer
stock over to group of trustees who ran the
separate companies as one giant corporation. - John D. Rockefellers Standard Oil Company
monopolized petroleum industry through trusts.
30Rockefeller and the Robber Barons
- Rockefeller used ruthless methods to monopolize
the petroleum industry.
- Employees paid low wages
- Competitors driven out of business as
Rockefeller would sell oil below the cost of
production. - Once competitors were driven out of business
Rockefeller would hike prices to absurd levels to
recover his losses. - Railroads were forced to give Standard Oil
rebates
31John D. Rockefeller
Owner of Standard Oil
32J.P. Morgan
33- robber barons-Industrialists like Carnegie, JP
Morgan, and Rockefeller who used ruthless tactics
to created monopolies
34Philanthropists- donates money to charity
- Industrialists defended fortunes through
charitable donation and philanthropy. - Rockefeller established University of Chicago
- Carnegie Foundation established Carnegie Hall and
3000 libraries by time he died in 1919, gave away
350,695,653
35Sherman Antitrust Act
- In 1890 Congress ratified the Sherman Antitrust
Act.
- any attempt to restrict competition in the market
was illegal.
- Enforcement of the Sherman Antitrust Act was
difficult.
- Companies that felt pressure could dissolve the
trust and form one company. - Supreme Court did not support the law.
36Business Boom Bypasses the South
- The industrialization that created economic
growth and controversy were concentrated in the
Northeast United States. - The South was trying to recover from the
physical destruction of the Civil War. - Economic growth in the South was retarded by the
lack of capital and large cities.
37Economic Causes
- Banks were unwilling to submit loans to Southern
business owners as they were considered poor
risks. - 90 of Southern railroads were owned by
Northerners - Southern farmers were charged exorbitant rates
by the Northern owned railroads - High tariffs injured Southerners who depended on
imported raw materials and manufactured goods.
38Social Causes
- The best technical workers and skilled craftsman
concentrated in the North for employment.