Chandler The Role of Business in the ...
Professor Alfred D. Chandler published a document entitled "The Role of Business in the United States: A Historical Survey" in the Winter 1969 version of "Perspectives on Business" from MIT Press. This paper chronicles how the economy developed. I find it surprising in many of the things that are not generally known or understood about the role and function of finance in the early years.
For a paper on the historical role of business in America to provide a solid foundation for discussions of the present and future, it must examine a number of questions: Who were the American businessmen? How did they come to go into business? How were they trained? How broad was their outlook? And, of even more importance, what did they do? How did they carry out the basic economic functions of production, distribution, transportation, and finance? How was the work of these businessmen coordinated so that the American economic system operated as an integrated whole? Finally, how did these men and the system within which they worked adapt to fundamental changes in population, to the opening of new lands, resources, and markets, and to technological developments that transformed markets, sources of supply, and means of production and distribution? The answers to these questions, as limited as they may be, should help to make more understandable the present activities and future capabilities of American business. p. 23I want to highlight the role of what has to be the key determinant in the development of the economy, the Merchant. Specifically, the role of the merchants in financing business development and trade. This enabled much of the development of the corporation, the separation of ownership and management and the speed, scope and scale of the structured hierarchy. Without the critical skills and capital of the merchants, it is doubtful that the hierarchy would have been able to rise to such prominence.
The colonial merchant was an all-purpose, non-specialized man of business. He was a wholesaler and a retailer, an importer and an exporter. In association with other merchants he built and owned the ships that carried goods to and from his town. He financed and insured the transportation and distribution of these goods. At the same time, he provided the funds needed by the planter and the artisan to finance the production of crops and goods. The merchant, operating on local, inter-regional, and international levels, adapted the economy to the relatively small population and technological changes of the day and to shifts in supply and demand resulting from international tensions. p. 24and
Only a few of the great landowners and leading lawyers knew the larger world. It was the colonial merchants who, allied with lawyers from the seaport towns and with the Virginia planters, encouraged the Revolution, brought about the ratification of the Constitution, and then set up the new government in the last decade of the eighteenth century. p. 24The Merchants were the key to the development of the economy. In this paper Chandler documents how effectively the Merchants expanded economic activity to the point where the scale and scope was beyond theirs and their extended families reach. How this eventually created the "Manager" and developed the concept of the separation of management and ownership. It is noted the professionalism of the managers and their development during this time. Management replacing direct ownership as the means to effective management. Yet what is clear in the history, and is plainly clear today, is that management have no financial stake in the firm. Interestingly Chandler notes this is not the first time that this has been an issue.
In many ways, the managers were more of an elite than the earlier businessmen had been. Even though this elite was based on performance rather than birth and played a critically constructive role in building and operating the world's most productive economy, its existence seemed to violate basic American democratic values. At the same time, its control of the central sector of the American economy challenged powerful economic concepts about the efficacy of a free market. After 1930, the managers came to share some of their economic power with others, particularly the federal government. Nevertheless, they were forced to do so not because of ideological reasons, but because they failed by themselves to assure the coordination and growth of the economy, the basic activities they had undertaken after 1900. p. 35In 2010 it is clear the division between ownership and management is as great as it ever has been. Management hold the reigns of power and have advanced their concerns over the shareholders. Leaving the ownership generally dissatisfied. Government, particularly the Obama administration, believes they are the natural progression to takeover from management. I think networks, and particularly People, Ideas & Objects and the Community of Independent Service Providers provide the best alternative to the innovative oil and gas producer.
The Depression clearly demonstrated that the corporation managers alone were unable to provide the coordination and adaptation necessary to sustain a complex, highly differentiated, mass production, mass-distribution economy. The coming of the Depression itself reflected population and technological developments. p. 35I think the eight hundred pound Gorilla in the room is that management have no stake in this game. If failure occurs then shareholders and debtors will pay the price and management will fend for themselves. Whether it is at another firm, or their vested pension that provides them with their continuity, either is satisfactory. The point is that with no skin in the game, what is keeping management at the table.?
They have proven unwilling to fund People, Ideas & Objects software developments, why do the hard work when a new pension statement has just arrived? We are foolish to expect anything more of management, they are there for the good times and their history shows they are incapable of bridging critical economic changes such as what we are facing today.
Just as the Merchants began the whole process. Applying their capital and skills to the economy. Future development of our economy is in the investor and shareholder hands once again. Society dictates, and I hear it in the Tea Party movement, that this process be renewed.
Our appeal should be based on these eight "Focused on" priorities and values of how better the oil and gas industry and its operations could be handled. They may not initially be the right way to go, but we are committed to working with the various communities to discover and ensure the right ones are. If your an enlightened producer, an oil and gas director, investor or shareholder, who would be interested in funding these software developments and communities, please follow our Funding Policies & Procedures, and our Hardware Policies & Procedures. If your a government that collects royalties from oil and gas producers, and are concerned about the accuracy of your royalty income, please review our Royalty Policies & Procedures and email me. And if your a potential user of this software, and possibly as a member of the Community of Independent Service Providers, please join us here.
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