The Emergence of Modern Business Enterprise in France, 1800-1930

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Harvard University Press, 2006 - 575 páginas

In this magisterial study, Michael Smith explains how France left behind small-scale merchant capitalism for the large corporate enterprises that would eventually dominate its domestic economy and project French influence throughout the world.

Arguing against the long-standing view that French economic and business development was crippled by missed opportunities and entrepreneurial failures, Smith presents a story of considerable achievement. French companies made major contributions to the Second Industrial Revolution of 1880-1930, especially in ferrous and non-ferrous metallurgy, electrochemicals, industrial gases, and motor vehicles. Rejecting the notion that France took a separate route to economic modernity, Smith argues that it tracked other industrial nations along a path dominated by large-scale production and corporate enterprise. Technological and organizational capabilities acquired by French companies prior to 1930 played a key role in the country's rapid economic recovery after World War II and its broader economic success in the second half of the twentieth century. Smith also addresses the distinctive characteristics of French economic and business development, including the pivotal role of the French state, the pervasive influence of French financiers, and the significance of labor conflict.

This superb account is an invaluable contribution to business history and the history of modern France.

 

Contenido

Laying the Foundations for Modern Capitalism
11
From Merchant Capitalism to Finance Capitalism
31
The Revolution in Banking and Transportation
67
The New World of Financial and Commercial
96
The Flowering of Industrial Capitalism
127
The Second Industrial Revolution and the Beginnings
325
France on the Verge
483
Notes
495
Index
561
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Michael Stephen Smith is Associate Professor of History, University of South Carolina.

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