This article assesses the validity of John Maynard Keynes' claim that the Lancashire cotton industry failed to restructure because the banks as debt holders prevented firms exiting the industry, creating persistent over-capacity. Using case studies from a substantial sample of Lancashire firms, the article explores archival evidence to establish their financial characteristics, to examine their equity and debt finance and the governance roles of directors and outside ownership groups. On the basis of this review the article develops hypotheses to suggest alternatives to the view that bank debt was the dominant explanation of firm level behaviour and industry failure. Applying these to a statistical dataset, results show that syndicates of l...
Scholars have long debated whether ownership matters for firm performance. The standard view regardi...
This article develops a theoretical model to explain the variation of network structures and network...
Because ownership was already more divorced from control in the largest stock market of 1911 (London...
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 analysis presented is based on a case study of Lancashire cotton textile firms. It traces their ...
The paper reinterprets Keynes’s analysis of the crisis in the Lancashire cotton industry in the 1920...
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,...
The joint stock company, centred on Oldham, is a central narrative in Douglas Farnie’s seminal book,...
This article introduces and assesses a conceptual model of institutional and corporate change. In pa...
The investment and divestment policies of Lancashire cotton companies are examined by reference to h...
Using Lancashire textile industry company case studies and financial records, mainly from the period...
Observers of the formerly communist transitional economies urge firms there to obtain funds from a r...
Scholars have long debated whether ownership matters for firm performance. The standard view regardi...
Scholars have long debated whether ownership matters for firm performance. The standard view regardi...
This article develops a theoretical model to explain the variation of network structures and network...
Because ownership was already more divorced from control in the largest stock market of 1911 (London...
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 analysis presented is based on a case study of Lancashire cotton textile firms. It traces their ...
The paper reinterprets Keynes’s analysis of the crisis in the Lancashire cotton industry in the 1920...
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,...
The joint stock company, centred on Oldham, is a central narrative in Douglas Farnie’s seminal book,...
This article introduces and assesses a conceptual model of institutional and corporate change. In pa...
The investment and divestment policies of Lancashire cotton companies are examined by reference to h...
Using Lancashire textile industry company case studies and financial records, mainly from the period...
Observers of the formerly communist transitional economies urge firms there to obtain funds from a r...
Scholars have long debated whether ownership matters for firm performance. The standard view regardi...
Scholars have long debated whether ownership matters for firm performance. The standard view regardi...
This article develops a theoretical model to explain the variation of network structures and network...
Because ownership was already more divorced from control in the largest stock market of 1911 (London...