The Corporation and the Twentieth Century: The History of American Business Enterprise

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A definitive reframing of the economic, institutional, and intellectual history of the managerial era

The twentieth century was the managerial century in the United States. An organizational transformation, from entrepreneurial to managerial capitalism, brought forth what became a dominant narrative: that administrative coordination by trained professional managers is essential to the efficient running of organizations both public and private. And yet if managerialism was the apotheosis of administrative efficiency, why did both its practice and the accompanying narrative lie in ruins by the end of the century? In
The Corporation and the Twentieth Century, Richard Langlois offers an alternative version: a comprehensive and nuanced reframing and reassessment of the economic, institutional, and intellectual history of the managerial era.

Langlois argues that managerialism rose to prominence not because of its inherent superiority but because of its contingent value in a young and rapidly developing American economy. The structures of managerialism solidified their dominance only because the century’s great catastrophes of war, depression, and war again superseded markets, scrambled relative prices, and weakened market-supporting institutions. By the end of the twentieth century, Langlois writes, these market-supporting institutions had reemerged to shift advantage toward entrepreneurial and market-driven modes of organization.

This magisterial new account of the rise and fall of managerialism holds significant implications for contemporary debates about industrial and antitrust policies and the role of the corporation in the twenty-first century.

Author(s): Richard N. Langlois
Series: The Princeton Economic History of the Western World, 119
Publisher: Princeton University Press
Year: 2023

Language: English
Pages: 815
City: Princeton

Cover
Contents
Preface
1. Invisible, Visible, and Vanishing Hands
2. Origins
3. The Progressive Era
The Light of Reason and the Necessity of Modern Society
Business Groups
The All-Permeating Principle of the Universe
Angle of Repose
4. The Seminal Catastrophe
The Export Department
Moral Equivalence
Wartime Socialism
An Industrial Engineer’s Utopia
5. Interlude
A Cloud of Suspicion
Structure and Strategy
One Hand Must Control It
Prologue to a Much Later Future
6. The Real Catastrophe
Contraction
Purchasing Power
We Want Beer
The Day of Enlightened Administration
Research and Development
7. Arsenal Again
Bottlenecks of Business
Economic Consequences
Priorities
Piquette Avenue
8. The Corporate Era
Reconversion
In Spite of Possible Cost
Industrial Policy
Trente Glorieuses
9. The Undoing
Out of the Woods
Destruction
An Elephants’ Graveyard
Disintermediation
Epilogue: Then and Now
Notes
References
Epigraph Credits
Index