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The Speculation Economy. How Finance Triumphed Over Industry

Lawrence Mitchell

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Paperback

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English
Berrett-Koehler
10 November 2008
The consequences of even a modest decrease in a business's stock price have become so dire that some executives would rather damage their corporation's long-term health than allow quarterly returns to fall below projections. How did this situation come about?

Lawrence E. Mitchell shows that the tipping point came in the first years of the 20th century. He explores the legal, financial, economic, and social transformations that led to the birth of the giant modern corporation and how this in turn spurred the rise of the stock market. Mitchell identifies what made traditionally cautious Americans become eager stock speculators, and why the federal government's attempts to regulate finance completely missed the mark. By the dawn of the 1920s, the stock market had left behind its business origins to become the very reason for the creation of business itself.
By:  
Imprint:   Berrett-Koehler
Country of Publication:   United States
Edition:   2nd edition
Dimensions:   Height: 234mm,  Width: 156mm,  Spine: 28mm
Weight:   610g
ISBN:   9781576756287
ISBN 10:   1576756289
Pages:   416
Publication Date:  
Audience:   Professional and scholarly ,  Professional and scholarly ,  Undergraduate ,  Undergraduate
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Preface Prologue Chapter One: The Principal of Cooperation Chapter Two: Sanctuary Chapter Three: Transcendental Value Chapter Four: The New Property Chapter Five: The Complete Whole Chapter Six: Much Ado About Nothing Chapter Seven: Panic and Progress Chapter Eight: The Speculation Economy Chapter Nine: The End of Reform Chapter Ten: Manufacturing Securities Epilogue Notes Select Bibliography Index About the Author

Lawrence E. Mitchell is Theodore Rinehart Professor of Business Law at The George Washington University Law School. After practicing corporate law for several years in New York, he entered academia and has been a leading corporate and business law scholar for twenty years. One of the founders of the progressive corporate law movement, named after his 1995 edited collection, Progressive Corporate Law, Mitchell has written extensively on a variety of topics ranging from corporate governance and the stock market to the history of anti-Semitism in the New York bar. His books include Stacked Deck- A Story of Selfishness in America and Corporate Irresponsibility- America's Newest Export, as well as casebooks on corporate law and corporate finance. At George Washington, Mitchell created the Sloan Program for the Study of Business in Society to support multidisciplinary research in corporate law, and the Institute for International Corporate Governance and Accountability to explore a range of issues arising from globalizing capitalism. He is a sought-after speaker in academic and nonacademic settings, and a frequent commentator in the news media. Mitchell holds a B.A. from Williams College and a J.D. from Columbia Law School.

Reviews for The Speculation Economy. How Finance Triumphed Over Industry

A fascinating account of the early 20th century emergence of a stock-market-oriented economy. -BusinessWeek The fullest and most persuasive account of the origins of the modern corporate myopic emphasis on the almighty quarterly bottom line, and of the emergence of everyman (and woman) as speculator. Equally valuable are the insights into the early efforts to address the growing power of corporations and the men who dominated them. -Maury Klein, Business History Review Mitchell has successfully constructed a highly engaging book about a fundamental but somewhat unexplored period in U.S. financial market history. -Carola Frydman, Journal of Economic History Mitchell's writing is graceful, comprehensive, and persuasive that as significant as the story of trusts and the trustbusters has been, the rise of finance capitalism and ultimately its federal coordination through such agencies as the Federal Reserve System and the Securities and Exchange Commission may be even more important. -Joel Seligman, President, University of Rochester, and author of The Transformation of Wall Street. Lawrence Mitchell's new work is full of fresh insight... Anyone interested in the development of our modern financial markets will be richly rewarded by a careful reading. -Harvey J. Goldschmid, Dwight Professor of Law, Columbia University, former Member, United States Securities and Exchange Commission


  • Commended for Independent Publisher Book Awards (Finance/Invest/Econ) 2009

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