Sylla and Wright's statistics of new US special incorporations in 1790-1860 show that they exceeded those in France, Prussia and the UK, but the aggregate paid-up share capitals of extant companies were not so far apart in 1860. The UK continued to lead corporatisation, as measured by the ratio of corporate share capital to GDP. The distinctive features of US corporations were that they were small, diverse and numerous, while UK corporations were larger, more capital-intensive, less prone to disappear and had more dispersed ownership
We describe how, during the 17th century, the business corporation gradually emerged in response to ...
The ownership of German corporations is quite different today from that of Anglo-American firms. How...
Until 1792, marine insurance in America was entirely in the hands of private underwriters (although ...
Although early corporate data are sparse, the statistics of individual incorporations by special act...
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...
In 1910 the world had almost half a million corporations, only one-hundredth of today's total. About...
Traces the evolution of the corporation in England, from Greco-Roman times to the Joint Companies Ac...
Using ownership and control data for 890 firm-years, this article examines the concentration of capi...
With new and comprehensive data on the international spread of listed and unlisted corporations befo...
This is the study of the corporation as it was transplanted to colonial Virginia, Massachusetts, and...
Scattered efforts were made in the United scale corporation farms in the last decades of States to o...
The striking correlation between the structure of the American Constitution and corporate charters, ...
The U.K. and U.S. were world leaders in transport development by the mid-19th century. We compare th...
Using ownership and control data for 890 firm‐years, this article examines the concentration of capi...
We describe how, during the 17th century, the business corporation gradually emerged in response to ...
The ownership of German corporations is quite different today from that of Anglo-American firms. How...
Until 1792, marine insurance in America was entirely in the hands of private underwriters (although ...
Although early corporate data are sparse, the statistics of individual incorporations by special act...
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...
In 1910 the world had almost half a million corporations, only one-hundredth of today's total. About...
Traces the evolution of the corporation in England, from Greco-Roman times to the Joint Companies Ac...
Using ownership and control data for 890 firm-years, this article examines the concentration of capi...
With new and comprehensive data on the international spread of listed and unlisted corporations befo...
This is the study of the corporation as it was transplanted to colonial Virginia, Massachusetts, and...
Scattered efforts were made in the United scale corporation farms in the last decades of States to o...
The striking correlation between the structure of the American Constitution and corporate charters, ...
The U.K. and U.S. were world leaders in transport development by the mid-19th century. We compare th...
Using ownership and control data for 890 firm‐years, this article examines the concentration of capi...
We describe how, during the 17th century, the business corporation gradually emerged in response to ...
The ownership of German corporations is quite different today from that of Anglo-American firms. How...
Until 1792, marine insurance in America was entirely in the hands of private underwriters (although ...