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Das mittlere personengeprägte Unternehmen als Wirtschaftsstabilisator

1963

by Bayer

Division of LaborMonopolyCapitalismEconomic PolicyEntrepreneurshipInnovationTaxationCooperativesEuropean UnionIndustrial RevolutionLaissez-faireInheritanceCredit ExpansionFederalismCapital IntensityEconomic IntegrationEconomies of ScaleRationalizationTax ReformAccountingMathematical EconomicsBankingMonetary PolicyProfit and LossPublic Finance

Table of Contents · 87 segments

1
Front Matter and Publication Metadataessay
2
Prefaceessay
3
Table of Contentsessay
4
Introduction: Economic Question of Medium Person-Centered Enterpriseschapter
5
Defining the Medium Person-Centered Enterprisechapter
6
Person-Relatedness as the Basis of Specific Economic Functionschapter
7
Attempts at Quantitative Measurement of Person-Centered Enterpriseschapter
8
Statistical Shares of Medium-Sized Enterprises in Construction, Trade, Industry, and Taxable Turnoveressay
9
Conflicting International Views on Medium-Sized Person-Centered Enterprisesessay
10
Country Survey: Introduction and the United Statesessay
11
Country Survey: Englandessay
12
Country Survey: Franceessay
13
Country Survey: Italyessay
14
Country Survey: Federal Republic of Germanyessay
15
Country Survey: Austriaessay
16
Country Survey: Switzerlandessay
17
Country Survey: Belgiumessay
18
Country Survey: Netherlandsessay
19
Country Survey: Scandinavian Countriesessay
20
Country Survey: Developing Countries and Japanessay
21
Introduction to Exogenous Difficulties and Endogenous Tensionstheoretical
22
Exogenous Difficulties: Definition and Schematic Economic Policychapter
23
Taxation as an Exogenous Difficulty for Middle Enterpriseschapter
24
Competition Regulation and the Restriction of Cooperative Self-Helpchapter
25
Endogenous Tensions: Opening Definitiontheoretical
26
Subjective Tensions: Introductiontheoretical
27
Static and Erratic Entrepreneurial Attitudestheoretical
28
Tradition Rigidity and Calculative Rationalitytheoretical
29
Master in the House, Representation, and Genuine Authoritytheoretical
30
Short-Run and Long-Run Thinkingtheoretical
31
Need for Cooperation and Mutual Distrusttheoretical
32
Objective Tensions: Technology, Automation, and Concentrationtheoretical
33
Series Production and Custom Productiontheoretical
34
Program Diversification and Specializationtheoretical
35
Local Demand, Expansion, and Distribution Organizationtheoretical
36
Routine Work and Firm-Owned Researchtheoretical
37
Self-Financing and External Financingtheoretical
38
Decline into Nonviable Small Business and Institutionalized Enterprisetheoretical
39
Tensions in Tradetheoretical
40
Section III Introduction: Removing Exogenous Difficulties and Bridging Endogenous Tensionschapter
41
Exogenous Difficultiestheoretical
42
Endogenous Tensions: The Importance of Bridging Subjective Tensionstheoretical
43
Bridging Objective Tensionstheoretical
44
Enterprise-Based Measures: Serial Production, Individual Orders, and Customer Advicechapter
45
Specialization, Type Reduction, and Expansion into Wider European Marketschapter
46
Tertiary-Sector Services, Division of Labor, and Capital Procurementchapter
47
Avoiding Unviable Smallness and Impersonal Institutionalizationchapter
48
Legal Form, Succession, Family Control, and Unified Leadershipchapter
49
Capital Base, Inheritance, Legal-Form Choice, and Interfirm Cooperationchapter
50
Limits of Internal Enterprise Action and the Question of Association Supportchapter
51
Association Instruments for Technical, Business, and International Cooperationchapter
52
Industrial Association Examples: Foundries, Textiles, and Toolschapter
53
Trade Associations, Entrepreneurial Education, and the Overall Role of Associationschapter
54
Research Institutes: International Overview and the Need for Cooperative Researchchapter
55
Principles for Bridging Enterprise Tensions through Research Instituteschapter
56
Research Institute Examples I: Forging, Heat Treatment, Tools, and Foundrieschapter
57
Research Institute Examples II: Paper, Shoes, Food Packaging, Inland Shipping, Wood, and Textileschapter
58
Research Institute Examples III: Contract Research, RKW, VDMA, and Retail Advisory Workchapter
59
Summary: How Research Institutes Bridge Subjective and Objective Enterprise Tensionschapter
60
Cooperation as a means of overcoming tensions: introductionchapter
61
Forms of experience exchange among entrepreneur-shaped industrial firmschapter
62
Industrial working groups: diversity, specialization, vertical cooperation, and institutional safeguardschapter
63
Rationalization cartels under German competition lawchapter
64
Long-standing industrial work communities: VDF, VAG, and WEBOchapter
65
European market tasks and international industrial cooperationchapter
66
Trade purchasing organizations and food retail cooperativeschapter
67
Shoe retail purchasing cooperatives and their ordering functionchapter
68
Textile purchasing associations and European countervailing powerchapter
69
Furniture purchasing associations in the European marketchapter
70
Other retail purchasing cooperatives and watch-trade cooperationchapter
71
Voluntary chains and cooperation between wholesale and retail tradechapter
72
Cooperation between trade and medium-sized industrychapter
73
Summary: federative cooperation as stabilizationchapter
74
Capital Procurement Difficulties for Medium-Sized Owner-Shaped Enterpriseschapter
75
Possible Solutions: Credit Institutions, Guarantees, and Self-Helpchapter
76
The Medium-Sized Owner-Shaped Enterprise as an Economic Stabilizer: Introductionchapter
77
Dynamic Stabilization and the Shaped Market Economytheoretical
78
Development Tendencies Toward Concentration and Institutionalizationtheoretical
79
Tasks of Dynamic Stabilization: Structural Equilibrium, Power, and Competitiontheoretical
80
Contribution of institutionalized large enterprises to dynamic stabilizationchapter
81
Person-shaped enterprises: function fulfillment and structural equilibriumchapter
82
Characteristic examples of dynamic medium-sized enterpriseschapter
83
Summary: medium enterprises as indispensable stabilizerschapter
84
Catalogue of North Rhine-Westphalia research reports in economicsbibliography
85
Practitioner overview I: definition, functions, and international position of medium enterprisesessay
86
Practitioner overview II: exogenous difficulties and endogenous tensionsessay
87
Practitioner overview III: policy remedies, self-help, and growth functionsessay