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Creating modern capitalism : how entrepreneurs, companies, and countries triumphed in three industrial revolutions

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What explains the national economic success of the United States, Britain, Germany, and Japan?

What can be learned from the long-term championship performances of leading business firms in each country?

How important were specific innovations by individual entrepreneurs? And in the end, what is the true nature of capitalist development?

The Pulitzer Prize winning historian Thomas K. McCraw and his co-authors present answers to these questions.

The book explains, for a broad audience, the interconnections among technological innovation, management science, the power of entrepreneurship, and national economic growth.

The authors approach each question from a comparative framework and with a triple focus on national economic systems, particular companies, and individual business leaders.

Above all, the book focuses on how specific entrepreneurs influenced the economic success of their countries: Josiah Wedgwood and Henry Royce in Britain; August Thyssen and Georg von Siemens in Germany; Henry Ford, Alfred Sloan, and the two Thomas J.

Watsons in the United States; Sakichi Toyoda, Masatoshi Ito, and Toshifumi Suzuki in Japan.

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Product Details
Harvard University Press
0674175565 / 9780674175563
Paperback / softback
02/01/1998
United States
English
800p. : ill.
23 cm
postgraduate /research & professional /undergraduate Learn More