Absentee Ownership

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A01=Thorstein Veblen
Absentee Owners
arts
Author_Thorstein Veblen
Business Concern
Business Enterprise
Businesslike Sabotage
Calculable Future
Category=KJV
Category=KN
Commercial Enterprise
Community's Workmanship
Community’s Workmanship
corporate governance theory
Corporation Financier
Country's Industrial System
Country's Industry
Country’s Industrial System
Country’s Industry
economic control in modern societies
economic power structures
eq_bestseller
eq_business-finance-law
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
Federal Reserve
Free Income
Handicraft System
industrial
Industrial Appliance
Industrial Arts
Industrial Man Power
Industrial System
institutional economics
Key Industries
Large Absentee Owners
Larger Net Gain
Marion J. Levy
political economy analysis
population
Sane Business
social stratification research
Sound Business Principles
Substantial Citizens
Thorstein Veblen
twentieth century capitalism
underlying
Underlying Population
Young Men

Product details

  • ISBN 9781560009221
  • Weight: 635g
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 30 Nov 1996
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Inc
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Paperback
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Absentee Ownership is an inquiry into the economic situation as it has taken shape in the twentieth century, particularly as exemplified in the case of America. According to Thorstein Veblen, absentee ownership is the main and immediate controlling interest in the life of civilized men. It is the paramount issue between the civilized nations, and guides the conduct of their affairs at home and abroad. World War I, says Veblen, arose out of a conflict of absentee interests and the peace was negotiated with a view to stabilize them. Part I of the book is occupied with a summary description of that range of economic circumstances and that sequence of economic growth and change that led up through the nineteenth century and have come to a head in the twentieth century. Part II is an objective, theoretical analysis of those economic circumstances described in the first part of the book. Marion Levy writes in his introduction about the phrase "absentee ownership" and how it has a definite connotation, representing a dark figure in the economic system, a frustration of desired levels of self-sufficiency. In the early days, the giants of business enterprise had faces--Rockefeller, Vanderbilt, Ford, Edison--but they all turned into faceless bureaucracies, says Levy. The giants may not have been nice, but they had faces and human traits. Absentee ownership wiped that out for the common man. Veblen's book continues to be of vital importance to the studies of economics, political theory, and sociology.

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