With new and comprehensive data on the international spread of listed and unlisted corporations before the First World War, this article shows the prominence of common law and Scandinavian civil law in the process. This association is interpreted as demonstrating the strong contribution of liberal (laissez-faire) industrial stances. The findings confirm an extended version of Rajan and Zingales's hypothesis that trade and capital openness are necessary for companies to flourish. Despite the possibilities that companies were created for fraud and exploitation, countries using the corporate form more extensively before 1914 had higher GDP per capita. Through this process, the benefit of imperialism extended to British dominions, but not much,...
The first globalisation, in the decades around 1900, was propelled by free-standing companies. This ...
We study 79 sets of bylaw provisions adopted by Norwegian corporations in a free contracting enviro...
Was the London Stock Exchange (LSE) little more than a Dickensian den of speculation, or did it make...
With new and comprehensive data on the international spread of listed and unlisted corporations befo...
Estimates of the extent of the corporate economy in eighty-one countries in 1910, when the number of...
Although early corporate data are sparse, the statistics of individual incorporations by special act...
Business historians generally agree that European cartels, while proliferating after 1918, favoured ...
This paper outlines the development of international firms over the period from 1870 to 1945. It sho...
Was the London Stock Exchange (LSE) little more than a Dickensian den of speculation, or did it make...
We describe how, during the 17th century, the business corporation gradually emerged in response to ...
This chapter interrogates the widely accepted idea that international law was diffused from the Euro...
Sylla and Wright's statistics of new US special incorporations in 1790-1860 show that they exceeded ...
In expanding on earlier analyses of the evolution of multinational business that have drawn from con...
Cartels, trusts and agreements to reduce competition between firms have existed for centuries, but b...
The work was conceived as an attempt to document an aspect of what has been called the rise of the "...
The first globalisation, in the decades around 1900, was propelled by free-standing companies. This ...
We study 79 sets of bylaw provisions adopted by Norwegian corporations in a free contracting enviro...
Was the London Stock Exchange (LSE) little more than a Dickensian den of speculation, or did it make...
With new and comprehensive data on the international spread of listed and unlisted corporations befo...
Estimates of the extent of the corporate economy in eighty-one countries in 1910, when the number of...
Although early corporate data are sparse, the statistics of individual incorporations by special act...
Business historians generally agree that European cartels, while proliferating after 1918, favoured ...
This paper outlines the development of international firms over the period from 1870 to 1945. It sho...
Was the London Stock Exchange (LSE) little more than a Dickensian den of speculation, or did it make...
We describe how, during the 17th century, the business corporation gradually emerged in response to ...
This chapter interrogates the widely accepted idea that international law was diffused from the Euro...
Sylla and Wright's statistics of new US special incorporations in 1790-1860 show that they exceeded ...
In expanding on earlier analyses of the evolution of multinational business that have drawn from con...
Cartels, trusts and agreements to reduce competition between firms have existed for centuries, but b...
The work was conceived as an attempt to document an aspect of what has been called the rise of the "...
The first globalisation, in the decades around 1900, was propelled by free-standing companies. This ...
We study 79 sets of bylaw provisions adopted by Norwegian corporations in a free contracting enviro...
Was the London Stock Exchange (LSE) little more than a Dickensian den of speculation, or did it make...