I would be very interested to see what you would recommend to students interested in the institutional framework of the 1870's take-off. You touch on this is STU -- the corporation and the research lab -- but there is no deep dive. As Paul Seabright says in his review of STU: "After nodding to the threefold blessings of "full" globalizat…
I would be very interested to see what you would recommend to students interested in the institutional framework of the 1870's take-off. You touch on this is STU -- the corporation and the research lab -- but there is no deep dive. As Paul Seabright says in his review of STU: "After nodding to the threefold blessings of "full" globalization, the modern corporation and the industrial research laboratory, he tells us a little about globalization, but nothing, for example, about how many industrial laboratories there were, or how they functioned, or about how or when the "modern corporation" came into existence, or what difference it made."
Obviously, STU couldn't cover everything in depth, and a course in world economic history even less so. Still, I would be interested to see what you would recommend for readings if you did a week or so of classes on this. I suspect the problem may be the the good texts are rather too unwieldy for ugrad classes. Chandlers' The Visible Hand for example.
Many thanks for the tips. Will follow up on Hughes and Smil. Part of my interest is Schumpeter's claim that modern corporation has rationalized and routinized innovation and made the entrepreneur obsolescent. From what I can tell he has the same late 19th century period in mind. Though he does not give a lot of detail or analysis for such an important claim.
I would be very interested to see what you would recommend to students interested in the institutional framework of the 1870's take-off. You touch on this is STU -- the corporation and the research lab -- but there is no deep dive. As Paul Seabright says in his review of STU: "After nodding to the threefold blessings of "full" globalization, the modern corporation and the industrial research laboratory, he tells us a little about globalization, but nothing, for example, about how many industrial laboratories there were, or how they functioned, or about how or when the "modern corporation" came into existence, or what difference it made."
Obviously, STU couldn't cover everything in depth, and a course in world economic history even less so. Still, I would be interested to see what you would recommend for readings if you did a week or so of classes on this. I suspect the problem may be the the good texts are rather too unwieldy for ugrad classes. Chandlers' The Visible Hand for example.
This is such a very good question. I wish I had an equivalent answer. Yes, Chandler. And Thomas Hughes, "American Genesis". And Vaclav Smil...
Many thanks for the tips. Will follow up on Hughes and Smil. Part of my interest is Schumpeter's claim that modern corporation has rationalized and routinized innovation and made the entrepreneur obsolescent. From what I can tell he has the same late 19th century period in mind. Though he does not give a lot of detail or analysis for such an important claim.