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Technology, Economic Growth, and the State: American Political Culture and Economy, 1870-2000

File(s)
Salvatore11_Technology_Economic_Growth_post.pdf (367.34 KB)
Permanent Link(s)
https://hdl.handle.net/1813/74933
Collections
Faculty Publications - Labor Relations, Law, and History
ILR Articles and Chapters
Author
Salvatore, Nick
Abstract

In the essay that follows, I will examine three periods in American economic life, with a focus on the interplay of technological innovations, economic transformation, and the responses to them. The first period, focused on the decades between 1870 and1920, experienced the emergence of the corporation as the major form of production and, not surprisingly, the development of oppositional political movements to it. The second period, from 1933 to the 1960s, marked an era of reform efforts to balance the relationship between management and labor, efforts that, ironically, accepted as their premise the structure and rationale of the corporation itself. The third period, from the 1970s to the present, examines on the impact the multinational corporation, operating in a globalized marketplace, on American economic and political life.

Date Issued
2008-01-01
Keywords
technology
•
innovation
•
economic growth
•
politics
•
corporations
Rights
Required Publisher Statement: © TÜBİTAK. Final version published as: Salvatore, N. (2008). Technology, economic growth, and the state: American political culture and economy, 1870-2000. In I. G. Yumașak (Ed.), Bilgi, Ekonomi ve Yönetim [Knowledge, economy and management] (Vol. 1) (pp. 49-64). Ankara, Turkey: TÜBİTAK. Reprinted with permission. All rights reserved.
Type
article

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