Title: SCALE AND SCOPE The Dynamics of Industrial Capitalism
1SCALE AND SCOPEThe Dynamics of Industrial
Capitalism
- Alfred D. Chandler, JR
- ???
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2Introduction Scale and Scope
- Before the railroad telegraph system
- Process of production, Distribution,
Transportation, and - Communication in capitalistic economies had
been carried on by - enterprises personally managed by their owners
- Operating the railroad telegraph system
- Create new type of Business enterprise
- Team of salaried managers who had little or no
equity in the firm - New forms of the transportation communication
system - Modern mass marketing Modern mass production
- Operating decisions became concentrated in the
hand of the managers.
3Introduction Scale and Scope
- With Salaried Manager coming
- A new type of capitalism
- Decision about current operations, employment,
output, and the allocation of resources for the
future operations were made by salaried managers. - New institution and new type of economic
provided a central dynamic of continuing economic
growth and transformation - Examine the beginnings and growth of managerial
capitalism globally and focusing on the history
of its basic institution in the worlds three
leading industrial nations.
4Chapter 1 The Modern Industrial Enterprise
- Simon Kuznets National economies ? 3 sectors
- Agriculture, Industry and Services
- Simon Kuznets Industry ? 6 sectors
- Mining
- Manufacturing
- Construction
- Utilities
- Transportation
- Communication
5Chapter 1 The Modern Industrial Enterprise
- US, Great Britain and Germany accounted for 2/3
of the - worlds industrial output in 1870
-
- In all 3 countries the largest economic growth
came in the - industrial sector, while agriculture
drastically declined in the - long run
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9Chapter 1 The Modern Industrial Enterprise
- Fundamental dynamic for change in capitalist
economies - The manufacturing enterprises whose collective
histories are - presented in this study have provided a
fundamental dynamic or - force for change in capitalist economies
since the 1880s. - New and improved processes of production
developed - Substantial economies of scale and scope
- Cost advantages
- Three-pronged investment in Production,
Distribution and Management - Powerful Competitive Advantage
- Their industries quickly became oligopolistic
no longer competed on the basis of price - Instead they competed for market share and
profit through - functional and strategic effectiveness
10Chapter 2Scale, Scope, and Organizational
Capabilities
- The New Institution
- Modern industrial enterprise
- - Contains a number of distinct operating
units - - Managed by a hierarchy of full-time
salaried executives - - More than a production function
(commercial, and research functions) - - Each unit has its own office, managers
and staffs, and acts as an independent
enterprise. - Modern multiunit enterprise
- - Owners ? top-level executive ?
middle-level executive ? lower-level executive - - Boards of directors include both top
managers (inside director) and part-time - representatives of the owners (outside
directors). - - Hierarchy (composed of middle and top
managers) makes the activities and - operations of the whole enterprise more
than the sum of its operation units.
11Chapter 2Scale, Scope, and Organizational
Capabilities
- How and why the institution grew why adding new
units? - The manufacturing enterprises became
multifunctional, multi-regional and multi-product - - Maintain a long-term rate of return on
investment(by reducing overall costs - of production and distribution)
- - By providing products that satisfied
existing demands - - By transferring facilities and skills to
more profit markets - - To assure access to market, and prevent
competitors from obtaining such access - - Merely to reinvest retained earnings
- - Financial reasons(tax, price of
securities, extend portfolio investment) - - Managerial reasons(greater control over
the work force) -
12Chapter 2Scale, Scope, and Organizational
Capabilities
- The initial motivation for its investment in new
operating units - Maintain its position of dominance
- - Actually permitted its managerial
hierarchy to reduce cost - - Improve functional efficiency in
marketing and purchasing as well as - production
- - Improve existing products and process and
to develop a new ones - - Allocate resources to meet the challenges
and opportunities of ever-changing technologies
and markets
13Chapter 2Scale, Scope, and Organizational
Capabilities
- Historical Attributes
- Modern industrial enterprises three most
significant attributes - - Clustered from the start in industries
having similar characteristics - - Appeared quite suddenly in the last
quarter of nineteen century - - Born and then continued to grow in much
the same manner - Table 5
- - 72 of the 401 companies were clustered in
food, chemicals, petroleum, - primary metals ,and the three machinery
groups. - - The predominance of American firms among
the worlds largest industrial - corporations
- - Only in chemicals, primary metals, and
electrical machinery did the non- - American firms outnumber the American
firms
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15Chapter 2Scale, Scope, and Organizational
Capabilities
- The large industrial corporations in U.S.
,Britain and Germany - The large industrial corporations in U.S. had
clustered in the same industry - (Earlier in the twentieth 1973)
- The pattern is much the same for Britain and
Germany - American firms were bigger and more numerous
- American consumer goods, industrial goods
- Britain consumer goods (food tobacco
industries) - Germany producers goods (chemicals heavy
machinery)
16Chapter 2Scale, Scope, and Organizational
Capabilities
- Economies of Scale and Scale in Production
- Major innovations in the process of production
during the last quarter of the 19th century
(exploiting the cost advantage of the economies
of scale and scope) - Newer industry -- drastic change in capital-labor
ratio, expanded output by improving and
rearranging inputs - - Greatly improved equipment
- - Reorienting the process of production
- - Placing the several intermediary process
within a single works - - Increasing the application of energy
17Chapter 2Scale, Scope, and Organizational
Capabilities
- Labor-intensive industries
- (apparel, textiles, lumber, furniture,
printing and publishing ) - - Large modern firm remained relatively rare
- - A sharp reduction of unit cost did not
accompany an increase in the volume - of materials processed by the plant
- Capital-intensive industries
- - Production units achieved much greater
economies of scale - - Minimum efficient scale-- had an
impressive cost advantage over small plants - - Economies of joint production a
significant cost reduction - - Fixed costs and sunk costs much higher
than in the more labor-intensive industries
18Chapter 2Scale, Scope, and Organizational
Capabilities
- In 1880s1890s Second Industrial Revolution
- - New mass-production
- - A sharp reduction in costs as plants
reached minimum efficient scale - - Only a small number of them could meet
the existing national and even - global demand became oligopolistic
- - The first to build a plant of minimum
efficient scale and recruit the essential - management team remained the leader in
its industry for decades. - - The revolution in transportation and
communication created opportunities - that led to a revolution in both
production and distribution.
19Chapter 2Scale, Scope, and Organizational
Capabilities
- The essential step in exploiting the new
technologies of - production
- Construct a plant of the optimal size
- The investment in production facilities large
enough to exploit the full potential of the
economies of scale - Both technologies and markets were dynamic
- Size and costs of production plants differed
widely from industry to industry
20Chapter 2Scale, Scope, and Organizational
Capabilities
- By integrating forward into distribution and
backward into purchasing. - Explaining such vertical integration requires a
more precise understanding of the - processes of volume distribution.
- The intermediary
- The intermediaries cost advantage had resulted
from exploiting the economies of - both scale and scope.
- The wholesalers advantages of both scope and
scale had their limits. - - A manufacturer of a single product rarely
achieved such a volume in retailing - - When limits were reached, it become more
advantageous for manufacturers.
- Economics of Scale and Scope in Distribution
21Chapter 2Scale, Scope, and Organizational
Capabilities
- Specialized facilities Skills in marketing and
distribution - The manufacturer had more accurate understanding
of special facilities and skills than the
wholesaler. - The more the products required such skills and
facilities, the less were the opportunities for
the intermediary to achieve economies of scope. - Intermediarys increasing investment in
product-specificity - Reduced the intermediarys cost advantage
- Discouraged intermediary making the necessary
investment
22Chapter 2Scale, Scope, and Organizational
Capabilities
- Another incentive for the manufacturer to invest
in a sale force - of his own was competition
- New production technologies with their
unprecedented output created a new type of
competition. - These few large plants could meet existing demand
and quickly began to compete for international
market. - Cost advantages of scale reflected the market
share. - In the new capital-intensive, oligopolistic
industries - No longer afford to depend on intermediary.
- Need a sale force of their own which holding a
market share large enough to assure the cost
advantage of scale.
23Chapter 2Scale, Scope, and Organizational
Capabilities
- The motive for integrating backward by building a
purchasing - Organization
- Take the place of commercial intermediaries.
- Integrating forward to into wholesaling.
- The establishment of a central purchasing office
- Provide the enterprise with skilled,
product-specialized buyers. - To schedule flows between production and traffic
departments - Product-specific services and facilities were
essential in coordinating - flows and reducing cost
- ?In these ways integrating backward into
purchasing, like integrating forward into
distribution, replace the existing commercial
intermediaries.
24Chapter 2Scale, Scope, and Organizational
Capabilities
- Building the Integrative Hierarchy
- In the creation of modern industrial enterprise
- The first step in the creation of modern
industrial enterprise was the investment in
production facilities large enough to achieve the
cost advantage s of scale and scope. - The second step was the investment in
product-specific marketing , distributing , and
purchasing networks. - The third and final step was the recruiting and
organizing of the managers needed to supervise
functional activities. - Organizing
- The resulting managerial hierarchies were
established along functional lines.Each function
was administered by a department. - Normally, the functional departments were
organized along the line-and-staff principle ,
with line officer having executive authority and - staff officers having an advisory role.
25Chapter 2Scale, Scope, and Organizational
Capabilities
- Top management
- The heads of the major functional departments,
the president, and sometimes a full-time
chairman. - The full-time salaries top managers, the inside
directorsand their staff, monitored the
activities and performance of the middle
managers. - In making broad strategic decisions they worked
closely with the outside directors, the
part-time representatives of families, banks, and
other shareholders.
26Chapter 2Scale, Scope, and Organizational
Capabilities
- First-Mover Advantages and Oligopolistic
Competition - Inventors, Pioneers, First-movers
- First in the development of a new set of improved
products or processes came the inventors. - Then came the pioneers, the entrepreneurs who
made the investment in facilities needed to
commercialize a product or process. - The first movers were pioneers or other
entrepreneurs who made the three of investments
in production, distribution, and management
required to achieve the competitive advantages of
scale, scope or both.
27Chapter 2Scale, Scope, and Organizational
Capabilities
- First-mover advantages
- The entrepreneurs who invested in plants big
enough to exploit the economies of scale or
scope brought into being the modern industrial
enterprise . - - The first to do so acquired powerful
competitive or First-mover advantages. - The first movers managers had already worked out
the bugs in the production processes .They had
already become practiced in assuring prompt
delivery. - They knew how to meet customers special needs
and to provide consumer credit ,installation ,and
after-sales repair and maintenance. - To compete with the first movers ,rival had to
build plants of comparable size and to make
necessary investment.
28Chapter 2Scale, Scope, and Organizational
Capabilities
- Oligopolistic Competition
- In those industries where scale or scope provided
cost advantage,the number of players remained
small,and there was little turnover among the
leaders. - The largest firm in the industries may become the
price leader,basing prices on estimates of demand
in relation to its own plant capacities and those
of its competitor. - Price remained a significant competitive
weapon,but these firms competed more forcefully
for market share and increased profits by means
of functional and strategic efficiency. - Continuing Growth of the Modern Enterprise
- Once the investment in production and
distribution was large enough to exploit fully
the economies of scale and scope ,and once the
necessary managerial hierarchy was in place, the
industrial enterprise grew - -it added new unit-in four ways.
1.Horizontal integration. - 2.Vertical integration.
- 3.Geographical expansion.
- 4.Product diversification.
29Chapter 2Scale, Scope, and Organizational
Capabilities
- Horizontal and vertical combination
- Horizontal combination
- In a large number of cases the incentive for
acquisition or merger of enterprises producing
competitive products was to gain more effective
control of output , price, and markets. - Such horizontal combination increased
organizational capabilities and - productivity only if a single, centralized
administrative control was quickly established. - Vertical combination
- The reasons for vertical integration were more
complex. - Increased productivities rarely resulted from
vertical integration unless the additional
processes were directly connected to the firms
existing ones by its own rails, conveyors, or
pipe.
30Chapter 2Scale, Scope, and Organizational
Capabilities
- The reason for vertical integration
- Vertical integration was to assure a steady
supply of material into the enterprises
production process. - It reduced the cost of high inventory storage and
other caring costs. It lowered the risk that
suppliers would fail to carry out contractual
agreements. - If the investment was not made to reduce the cost
of transaction risk, it might be made merely as a
profitable portfolio investment. - Geographical Expansion And Product
Diversification - Geographical expansion into distant markets was
based primarily on organizational capabilities
that had been developed by exploiting economies
of scale. - Product diversification was based on
organizational capabilities that had been
developed by economies of scope.
31Chapter 2Scale, Scope, and Organizational
Capabilities
- Structural change
- When diversification moved beyond producing a
full line, new marketing personnel and facilities
had to be acquired . - Diversification into related industries brought
far more thoroughgoing administrative
restructuring. This structural change came when
the senior managers realized that they had
neither the time nor the necessary information to
coordinate and monitor day-to-day operations. - The solution was to establish a structure
consisting of divisional offices to administer
each of the major product line.
32Competitive Managerial CapitalismThe United
States
PART?
- Competitive Managerial Capitalism
- From the 1890s on, the United States was the
worlds leading industrial nation. - What Crucial differences in the nature of markets
and in the speed of adopting new technologies led
American industrialists to make a greater
investment in new units of distribution,
purchasing, production, and research and
development than did industrialists in other
economies? - Why did the modern, integrated, multiunit
enterprise appear in greater numbers and attain a
greater size in a shorter period of time in the
United States than it did in Europe? - Why, by World War I, were managerial hierarchies
becoming more extensive and the resulting
separation of ownership and management becoming
more clear-cut in the United States than in other
economies?
33Competitive Managerial CapitalismThe United
States
34Chapter3 The Foundations of Managerial
Capitalism in American Industry
- The Domestic Market
- What most strikingly differentiated the United
States from Great Britain and Germany in the late
19 century were the geographical size and very
rapid growth of its domestic market. - In addition to its size, from the 1870s until the
Great Depression of the 1930s the American
domestic market grew faster than that of any
other nation. - Until the depression the United States
outdistanced other leading industrial economies
in the growth of both population and per-capita
incomethe two basic ingredients that determined
overall consumer demand. - American manufacturers were much less dependent
on foreign trade than were those of Britain and
Germany.
35Chapter3 The Foundations of Managerial
Capitalism in American Industry
- The Impact of the Railroads and Telegraph
- In the United States the geographical extent of
the country(even before the West was won)as well
as the distances between urban centers meant that
far greater mileage had to be constructed than in
other industrial countries. - The railroad provided the technology, not only to
move an unprecedented volume of goods at
unprecedented speed, but to do so on a precise
schedule, that is, a schedule stated not in terms
of weeks or months but of days and even hours. - These managers subdivided their operations into
smaller operating groups and then appointed
middle managers to supervise, monitor, and
coordinate the different functional activities on
each division.
36Chapter3 The Foundations of Managerial
Capitalism in American Industry
- To prevent what railroad managers had come to
consider ruinous competition and to assure the
continuing flow of traffic needed for economic
survival, the railroads formed regional
federations. - Besides being the first businesses to be
administered through extensive hierarchies and
the first to compete in a modern oligopolistic
manner, the railroads were the first enterprises
to be funded by modern financial institutions. - The cost of constructing and equipping railroads
was so much higher than that of all previous
business ventures, railroad transportation became
the first modern high-fixed-cost business, and so
the first in which continuous capacity
utilization became a major concern.
37Chapter3 The Foundations of Managerial
Capitalism in American Industry
- The Revolution in Production
- Branded, Packaged product
- Mass-Produced Light Machinery
- Electrical Equipment
- Industry Chemical
- Metals
- The new form of transportation and communication
- Brought about an organization revolution in
distribution. - Created an even greater revolution in production.
- Stimulating impressive technological and
organization change. - The laying down of railway and telegraph
precipitated a wave of the Second Industrial
Revolution at the end of nineteenth century.
38Chapter3 The Foundations of Managerial
Capitalism in American Industry
- The new technologies
- Transformed the processing of many foods
- Revolutionized the refining of many metals and
materials. - Created brand new chemical industries
- Brought into being a wide range of machinery
- In the last decade of nineteenth century had a
most profound impact by Thomas Edison, Werner
Siemens, and other inventor that led to mass
production and distribution of electric power. - Transformed mechanical processes of production .
- Created a new form of urban transportation.
- Revolutionized the making of many metals and
chemicals.
39Chapter3 The Foundations of Managerial
Capitalism in American Industry
- Technological innovations become available
worldwide, entrepreneurs had to make the
three-pronged investment. (It was the
investment,not the innovation ) - To realize the cost advantages of scale and scope
in production. - To create a product-specific marketing network .
- To recruit and train a team of salaries managers
who would assure the continuing flow of goods
through the processes of production and
distribution.
- The major investments of the critical decades
(1880s1890s). - Transformed the American industry.
- Had a powerful impact on the legal,financial and
education environment until the twentieth century.
40Chapter3 The Foundations of Managerial
Capitalism in American Industry
- Branded, Packaged product
- Occur in
- Tobacco industry
- Grain industry
- Consumer chemicals industry
- Fresh meat and other perishable products
- The large enterprise had a competitive advantage
over smaller firms. - The cost advantage of both were enough to
transform industries - and to create powerful new enterprises.
41Chapter3 The Foundations of Managerial
Capitalism in American Industry
Tobacco quantity cost
Man-made 3000 c/day 5 shilling 60 pence
Machine 125000 c/day 10 pence
- Packaging and brand became part of the
production process.
- The manufacturer placed its brand name on the
packaged product - and began to advertised it.
- Fresh meat and other perishable
products--develop and build a - network of refrigerated cars, ships, and
depots.
42Mass-Produced Light Machinery
Chapter3 The Foundations of Managerial
Capitalism in American Industry
- Originally developed to produce small
armsAmerican system - of manufacturing in the 1880s.
- Adopted the first modern mass-production methods
of fabricating - and assembling fully interchangeable and
standardized parts. - Including
- - Small arms
- - Sewing machine
- - Agricultural machine
43Chapter3 The Foundations of Managerial
Capitalism in American Industry
ELECTRICAL EQUIPMENT The enterprises created in
the 1880sto commercialize the invention of Thomas
Edison, Elihu Thomson,and George
Westing-house. Thomson-Houston---created the most
effective sales organization both at home and
abroad
American
General Electrical
had become the leaders of a global oligopoly that
would remain little changed until well after
World War ?
Westinghouse
Siemens Halske
European
(AEG)
44Chapter3 The Foundations of Managerial
Capitalism in American Industry
- INDUSTRIAL CHEMICALS
- In the late l880s and early l890s American
entrepreneurs made the investments and created
the managerial teams necessary to exploit new
electrolytic technologies in chemistry and also
metallurgy. - Skill engineers and with the knowledge of
chemistry as well as physics - knowledge ?replace commercial intermediaries
- Invented and produce dynamite (Alfred Nobels
patent) - Based on coal and coke
- Beginning to make impressive investments in
research and development by - World War?and much larger than those of British
firms.(greatly enhanced - organizational capabilities)
45Chapter3 The Foundations of Managerial
Capitalism in American Industry
- Leadership --- German entrepreneurs
- Exploiting the new processes for producing
man-made dyes, pharmaceuticals, - and aim on the basis of coal-tar chemistry
- Had responded even more rapidly and efficiently
to the new opportunities and - had achieved a strong competitive advantage in
the all-important European - markets
46Chapter 3 The foundations of Managerial
Capitalism in American Industry
- Pioneering Enterprise
- Only pioneering enterprises made interrelated
investments in production, - distribution, and management, these
enterprises quickly dominated the market. - Overcapacity and Declining throughput
- At established industries pioneers were plagued
by overcapacity, and declining - throughput.
- Increasing output and overcapacity intensified
completion and drove down - prices.
- The resulting decline of price in manufactured
goods.
47Chapter 3 The foundations of Managerial
Capitalism in American Industry
- Formal agreement
- The respond to intensified competition and
resulting price decline - ? Reach formal agreements (enforced by trade
associations) - - Reduce output
- - Set prices
- - Allocate regional markers
- New capital and energy-intensive industries
specially intensified to form - such associations.
- Unstable Situation
- Such cartels remained unstable because the
difficulty for providing mechanism - from secretly cutting prices by granting
rebates or falsifying their books. - In US UK, such opportunistic behavior was
particularly rampant because - contractual arrangement between manufacturers.
48Chapter 3 The foundations of Managerial
Capitalism in American Industry
- Sherman Antitrust Act
- Enforcement became even more difficult in US
after 1890, when congress - passed the Sherman Antitrust Act.
- Reinforced the common law by declaring such
combinations illegal. - Close inter-firm cooperation was defined as
illegal collusion
- Circumstance of Sherman Antitrust Act
- With little debate and even less opposition, Act
made clear the strong - antimonopoly bias of the American public
- Act also reflected the most important
non-economic cultural difference - between the US UK, Germany
49Chapter 3 The foundations of Managerial
Capitalism in American Industry
- Impact of Sherman Antitrust Act
- Sherman Antitrust Act was to have a profound
impact on the evolution of - modern industrial enterprises in US.
- Technology and markets determined when
enterprises appeared - and in what industries they were
located. - Sherman Act defined the continuing
interrelationships between the - new enterprises within a single
industry.
50Chapter 3 The foundations of Managerial
Capitalism in American Industry
- State of New Jersey (1889)
- Authorizing the formation of holding companies
that might operate on national scale. - Permitted the formation of a company that could
hold the stock of existing corporations chartered
in any state. - Impact
- Members of trade associations, as well as other
corporations, were able to exchange their stock
for shares in a new holding company. - The legal form
- - Permitted rationalization of facilities and
personnel - - The consolidation or creation of nation-wide
sales forces - - The recruitment of a managerial hierarchy
to operated and plan for the - enterprise as a whole.
51Chapter 3 The foundations of Managerial
Capitalism in American Industry
- Consolidations clustered in 3 time period
- 1st period 1880s ( Before the New Jersey law)
- Growth through merger and acquisition became
increasingly widespread during the 18801990) - The consolidation occurred almost wholly in
refining and distilling industries (American
Cotton Oil American lead)
- 2st period 189093 (after the New Jersey law)
- lasted until the coming of a severe economic
depression in 1893 - more mergers occurred than in the previous
decades - Soon several of these enterprises began the move
toward administrative - centralization and rationalization.
52Chapter 3 The foundations of Managerial
Capitalism in American Industry
- 3st period 18971903 (the most largest and the
most significant merger movement) - Because of continuing antitrust legislation,
the increasing difficulty of enforcing - contractual agreement by trade association during
the economic depression, and the return of
prosperity and buoyant stock market.
- The predominant motive was to market control
through legally enforceable combinations. - - transforming existing trade associations
into holding companies - - uniting non-associated competitors
- Another motive was to profit from the marketing
and manipulation of securities - - picked up speed, investment bankers and
stock brokers began to participate in the process
- After the Supreme Court had indicate by its
ruling in several cases, cartels carried on
though trade associations were vulnerable under
the Sherman Act.
53Chapter 3 The foundations of Managerial
Capitalism in American Industry
- Scale economies based on carefully scheduled
high-volume flows - Du Pont
- - reorganize and rationalize the American
explosives industry through merger and
acquisition - The formation of American Cotton Oil, Southern
Cotton Oil, National Lead, Virginia-Carolina
Chemical, National Biscuit, American Tobacco,
American Radiator, General Electric.. - - Through exploiting the cost advantages of
scale - - From a strategy of horizontal combination
to one of vertical integration - - From a strategy of achieving market
control through contractual cooperation to one of
achieving market dominance -
54 Giant United States Steel Corporation - One
of few mergers continued to be managed as
federations - Remained more concerned about
controlling price and output than about fully
exploiting the economies of throughput (Ch. 4)
Chapter 3 The foundations of Managerial
Capitalism in American Industry
- American Sugar Refining and Corn Products
Refining - - Change in strategy was delayed
- - Endure the trauma of bankruptcy and
financial reorganization -
- Primary producers of fabricated products -
Consolidated and administratively centralized in
order to exploit the economies - of scale.
- Centralization and rationalization were more
profitable than attempting to - control price and output by means of a
decentralized holding company.
55Chapter 3 The foundations of Managerial
Capitalism in American Industry
- All the mergers that lasted , they successfully
exploited the economies of scale and those of
scope - - Few enterprises resulting from merger
remained among the two hundred leaders unless
they transformed themselves from a mere holding
company into an operating one - (centralized, functionally
departmentalized structure) - - Production technologies gave large plants
cost advantages - - product-specific distribution and
marketing needs warranted an investment in a
sales organization - Transformation of holding companies into
centralized operating enterprises - - Occurred between the merger movement at
the turn of the century and the nation's entry
into World War I - - Successful mergers had made their shift
to an operating company that integrated volume
production and distribution - Few combinations that continued to operate
outmoded plants - - Did not build new ones that were close
to optimal size - - Failed to grow and usually failed to
make as satisfactory a return on their invested
capital
56Chapter 3 The foundations of Managerial
Capitalism in American Industry
- Political and Legal Responses
- Antitrust law
- In 1911 antitrust action in the courts resulted
for the first time in the dissolution of the
three major integrated industrial enterprises. - One of the strongest pressure groups was small
business, the small manufacturers and
distributors in those industries where big
business dominated. - The Federal Trade Commission Act and the Clayton
Act were both passed in 1914-firmly prohibited
the maintenance of market power through
contractual cooperation. - The Impact of antitrust law
- These actions, however, did not prevent increases
in market share through functional and strategic
effectiveness. - This was because many who enforced the antitrust
laws agreed that large industrials were able to
increase productivity and so reduce prices. - Then , antitrust laws brought little relief to
its strongest supporters.
57Chapter 3 The foundations of Managerial
Capitalism in American Industry
- The Response of Financial Institutions
- Merger movement
- The merger movement was the most important
evolution of modern industrial enterprise in the
United States from 1880s to the 1940s. - These mergers put representatives of investment
banks on the board of American industrial
enterprises for the first time. - Capitalist
- Prior to the mergers of the 1890s, entrepreneurs
creating new enterprises had obtained fund for
the initial investment in plant and facilities
from local businessmen and local banks. - When their requirements had outrun local sources,
industrialists had turned to wealthy individuals,
who often identified themselves as capitalist.
58Chapter 3 The foundations of Managerial
Capitalism in American Industry
- The Response of Financial Institutions
- Full-time manager
- Such venture capitalist played a relatively small
role in the great merger movement. These mergers
were instigated and financed by promoters, by
investment banks. - The representatives of American banks on the
board of the newly consolidated enterprises had
little personal knowledge of the businesses , and
they continued to rely on the full-time managers. - As the knowledge and the experience of the
full-time managers on the board increased and the
new enterprise succeeded in financing its
current operations and long-term growth primarily
from retained earnings, the influence of the
financiers waned. - The Response of Educational Institutions
- The merger movement and the resulting
rationalization of production and distribution
had a major impact on American educational
institutions. - After 1900 the relationship between higher
education and the industries enterprise became
closer. - The rationalization of production and
distribution that followed the great merger
movement created a demand for executive in other
areas besides production.
59Chapter 3 The foundations of Managerial
Capitalism in American Industry
- The Coming of Competitive Managerial Capitalism
- Separating of ownership from management
- The rapid growth of these hierarchies in the two
decades before 1917 was already bringing about a
separating of ownership from management. - By 1917 the distinction between inside and
outside director becoming clear in the United
States. - By World War I managerial capitalism had taken
root in those industries most essential to the
continuing health and growth of the American
economy. - Three basic factor had encouraged the expansion
of the new modern industrial enterprise - - The large, rapidly growing,
geographically extensive, affluent domestic
market. - - The continuing development of
capital-intensive technologies of production. - - The legal environment that prevented the
enforcement of the contractual price-and-output
arrangements
60Chapter 3 The foundations of Managerial
Capitalism in American Industry
- The Coming of Competitive Managerial Capitalism
- In the United States the structure of the new
industries had come,with rare exceptions,
oligopolistic, not monopolistic. - In these oligopolies the new managerial
enterprises continued to compete functionally and
strategically for market share and profit. - By World War I the system of competitive
managerial capitalism in the United States was
already different from the continuing personal or
family capitalism practice in Britain and the
cooperative or organized capitalism developing in
Germany.