The analysis presented is based on a case study of Lancashire cotton textile firms. It traces their financial history through the sharp boom of 1919-20, and the sudden crisis that followed. Using a sample of representative companies it is shown that firms unwittingly adopted inappropriate financial structures that acted as the decisive constraint on the adoption of recovery strategies in the subsequent slump. The paper explains how the relationship between indebtedness and asset values prevented subsequent internal financial retrenchment, restructuring and re-equipment, and dictated the competitive processes within the industry. It is demonstrated that financial constraints were the decisive factor determining the feasibility of competitive...
This book is about a company which pioneered a major new industry, failed to build on that success, ...
As business expand in modern global economy, cutthroat competition also becomes a reality. It become...
Includes bibliographical references.The period from 1890 to 1910 is usually seen as the transition e...
This article assesses the validity of John Maynard Keynes' claim that the Lancashire cotton industry...
This article assesses the validity of John Maynard Keynes' claim that the Lancashire cotton industry...
The objective of this analysis is to provide a reinterpretation of the decline of the Lancashire cot...
The joint stock company, centred on Oldham, is a central narrative in Douglas Farnie’s seminal book,...
Using Lancashire textile industry company case studies and financial records, mainly from the period...
The investment and divestment policies of Lancashire cotton companies are examined by reference to h...
Internal bank archives are used to examine the nature of English bank firm relationships during peri...
The paper reinterprets Keynes’s analysis of the crisis in the Lancashire cotton industry in the 1920...
The relationship between industry and the financial system in the interwar years has been extensivel...
Was the London Stock Exchange (LSE) little more than a Dickensian den of speculation, or did it make...
Was the London Stock Exchange (LSE) little more than a Dickensian den of speculation, or did it make...
Was the London Stock Exchange (LSE) little more than a Dickensian den of speculation, or did it make...
This book is about a company which pioneered a major new industry, failed to build on that success, ...
As business expand in modern global economy, cutthroat competition also becomes a reality. It become...
Includes bibliographical references.The period from 1890 to 1910 is usually seen as the transition e...
This article assesses the validity of John Maynard Keynes' claim that the Lancashire cotton industry...
This article assesses the validity of John Maynard Keynes' claim that the Lancashire cotton industry...
The objective of this analysis is to provide a reinterpretation of the decline of the Lancashire cot...
The joint stock company, centred on Oldham, is a central narrative in Douglas Farnie’s seminal book,...
Using Lancashire textile industry company case studies and financial records, mainly from the period...
The investment and divestment policies of Lancashire cotton companies are examined by reference to h...
Internal bank archives are used to examine the nature of English bank firm relationships during peri...
The paper reinterprets Keynes’s analysis of the crisis in the Lancashire cotton industry in the 1920...
The relationship between industry and the financial system in the interwar years has been extensivel...
Was the London Stock Exchange (LSE) little more than a Dickensian den of speculation, or did it make...
Was the London Stock Exchange (LSE) little more than a Dickensian den of speculation, or did it make...
Was the London Stock Exchange (LSE) little more than a Dickensian den of speculation, or did it make...
This book is about a company which pioneered a major new industry, failed to build on that success, ...
As business expand in modern global economy, cutthroat competition also becomes a reality. It become...
Includes bibliographical references.The period from 1890 to 1910 is usually seen as the transition e...