The Scale of Production in Western Economic Development: A Comparison of Official Industry Statistics in the United States, Britain, France, and Germany, 1905–1913

We use census data and information on large firms to generate descriptions of structural features of Western industry around 1906. We find that although the United States conforms to existing stereotypes, most other nations do not. German industry stands out as having the smallest plants and firms and the lowest concentration levels both in the aggregate and when grouped by industrial classifications. Equally startling, French levels of plant size and concentration are comparable to those of the United States. We speculate on the importance of these results for rethinking the traditional analysis of industrial development in the early twentieth century.

[1]  R. Coase The Nature of the Firm , 1937 .

[2]  G. Bittlingmayer Did Antitrust Policy Cause the Great Merger Wave? , 1985, The Journal of Law and Economics.

[3]  T. Kemp,et al.  An Economic History of Modern France. , 1980 .

[4]  Economic Growth in France and Britain, 1851-1950 , 1965 .

[5]  W. Dugger The Economic Institutions of Capitalism , 1987 .

[6]  Alfred D. Chandler,et al.  Managerial Hierarchies, Comparative Perspectives on the Rise of the Modern Industrial Enterprise , 1981 .

[7]  Fred V. Carstensen,et al.  The Rise of the Corporate Economy. , 1980 .

[8]  A. D. H. Kaplan Big enterprise in a competitive system , 1966 .

[9]  R. Liefmann Cartels, concerns and trusts , 1933 .

[10]  C. Shaw The Large Manufacturing Employers of 1907 , 1983 .

[11]  William Lazonick,et al.  The Decline of the British Economy. , 1987 .

[12]  L. Hannah MERGERS IN BRITISH MANUFACTURING INDUSTRY, 1880–1918 , 1974 .

[13]  W. Scott,et al.  Tracking the Giant Corporation@@@Scale and Scope: The Dynamics of Industrial Capitalism. , 1991 .

[14]  Stephen Broadberry,et al.  Manufacturing and the Convergence Hypothesis: What the Long-Run Data Show , 1993, The Journal of Economic History.

[15]  S. Pollard,et al.  Britain's Prime and Britain's Decline: The British Economy, 1870-1914. , 1989 .

[16]  J. Clapham,et al.  The Economic Development of France and Germany. , 1921 .

[17]  J. Nye Firm Size and Economic Backwardness: A New Look at the French Industrialization Debate , 1987, The Journal of Economic History.

[18]  Werner Troesken A Note on the Efficacy of the German Steel and Coal Syndicates. , 1989 .

[19]  C. Schmitz The growth of big business in the United States and Western Europe 1850-1939 , 1993 .

[20]  D. Landes French Entrepreneurship and Industrial Growth in the Nineteenth Century , 1949, The Journal of Economic History.

[21]  R. Tilly,et al.  German Banks, German Growth, and Econometric History , 1976, The Journal of Economic History.

[22]  Patrick O'Brien,et al.  Economic growth in Britain and France, 1780-1914 , 2012 .

[23]  David S. Landes,et al.  The Unbound Prometheus , 1969 .

[24]  H. H. Stokes,et al.  German Banks and German Growth, 1883–1913: an Empirical View , 1974, The Journal of Economic History.

[25]  Frederic L. Pryor An International Comparison of Concentration Ratios , 1972 .

[26]  M. Utton Some Features of the Early Merger Movements in British Manufacturing Industry , 1972 .

[27]  P. Payne The Emergence of the Large-Scale Company in Great Britain, 1870-1914 , 1967, Congrès et Colloques.