Although early corporate data are sparse, the statistics of individual incorporations by special act in 1790‐1860 assembled by Sylla and Wright leave no doubt that new creations of corporations proper in the US rapidly outstripped those in France, Prussia and the UK. However, other limited liability entities -- notably commandites (with and without shares) -- were earlier and numerous in continental Europe and the numbers of extant companies, and particularly their aggregate paid-up share capitals, were closer together in 1860. It was the UK, not the US, which continued to lead corporatization as measured by the ratio of corporate share capital to GDP and it was not until the twentieth century that the US caught up, while both France and Ge...
The U.K. and U.S. were world leaders in transport development by the mid-19th century. We compare th...
The economic development and growth of America was dynamic and unique from that of any European nati...
The organisation of business transactions in the preindustrial period, once a central concern in sch...
Although early corporate data are sparse, the statistics of individual incorporations by special act...
Sylla and Wright's statistics of new US special incorporations in 1790-1860 show that they exceeded ...
Estimates of the extent of the corporate economy in eighty-one countries in 1910, when the number of...
In 1900 US business corporations were dominated by plutocratic family owners, while British and Fren...
With new and comprehensive data on the international spread of listed and unlisted corporations befo...
In 1910 the world had almost half a million corporations, only one-hundredth of today's total. About...
The striking correlation between the structure of the American Constitution and corporate charters, ...
Following recent scandals such as Enron and World.com, the problems of governing business corporatio...
Modern economies are heavily dependent on the corporate form of doing business. The sheer scale of m...
Modern discussions of corporate governance have focused on convergence of “varieties of capitalism,”...
We use the history of private limited liability companies (PLLCs) to challenge two pervasive assumpt...
The ownership of German corporations is quite different today from that of Anglo-American firms. How...
The U.K. and U.S. were world leaders in transport development by the mid-19th century. We compare th...
The economic development and growth of America was dynamic and unique from that of any European nati...
The organisation of business transactions in the preindustrial period, once a central concern in sch...
Although early corporate data are sparse, the statistics of individual incorporations by special act...
Sylla and Wright's statistics of new US special incorporations in 1790-1860 show that they exceeded ...
Estimates of the extent of the corporate economy in eighty-one countries in 1910, when the number of...
In 1900 US business corporations were dominated by plutocratic family owners, while British and Fren...
With new and comprehensive data on the international spread of listed and unlisted corporations befo...
In 1910 the world had almost half a million corporations, only one-hundredth of today's total. About...
The striking correlation between the structure of the American Constitution and corporate charters, ...
Following recent scandals such as Enron and World.com, the problems of governing business corporatio...
Modern economies are heavily dependent on the corporate form of doing business. The sheer scale of m...
Modern discussions of corporate governance have focused on convergence of “varieties of capitalism,”...
We use the history of private limited liability companies (PLLCs) to challenge two pervasive assumpt...
The ownership of German corporations is quite different today from that of Anglo-American firms. How...
The U.K. and U.S. were world leaders in transport development by the mid-19th century. We compare th...
The economic development and growth of America was dynamic and unique from that of any European nati...
The organisation of business transactions in the preindustrial period, once a central concern in sch...