The paper reinterprets Keynes’s analysis of the crisis in the Lancashire cotton industry in the 1920s. It presents empirical evidence showing that syndicates of local shareholders, but not the banks, were an important brake on firms exiting, at a time when exit barriers were otherwise unproblematic in this competitive industry. Moreover, syndicates milked firms of any profits through dividends, thereby limiting reinvestment and re-equipment possibilities. The case shows that where laissez-faire fails in response to a crisis, the associated response may need to assess both ownership structure and its relationship to competitive industry structure
This paper will consider the role of family firms, the Chandlerian ‘modern business ent...
Historically, financial crises have been commonplace. Why did the latest episode almost derail the w...
This thesis analyzes the fortunes of the U.K. cotton industry during two sharply contrasting periods...
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...
This article assesses the validity of John Maynard Keynes' claim that the Lancashire cotton industry...
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,...
The objective of this analysis is to provide a reinterpretation of the decline of the Lancashire cot...
[FIRST PARAGRAPH] The institutional perspective sees the UK's economic decline in the twentieth cent...
Using Lancashire textile industry company case studies and financial records, mainly from the period...
The analysis presented is based on a case study of Lancashire cotton textile firms. It traces their ...
This introduction presents an overview of the key concepts discussed in the subsequent chapters of t...
The high level of profits along with low levels of gross physical investment has been characterized ...
At the peak of its success (prior to the First World War), the Lancashire industrial district was th...
This paper will consider the role of family firms, the Chandlerian ‘modern business ent...
Historically, financial crises have been commonplace. Why did the latest episode almost derail the w...
This thesis analyzes the fortunes of the U.K. cotton industry during two sharply contrasting periods...
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...
This article assesses the validity of John Maynard Keynes' claim that the Lancashire cotton industry...
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,...
The objective of this analysis is to provide a reinterpretation of the decline of the Lancashire cot...
[FIRST PARAGRAPH] The institutional perspective sees the UK's economic decline in the twentieth cent...
Using Lancashire textile industry company case studies and financial records, mainly from the period...
The analysis presented is based on a case study of Lancashire cotton textile firms. It traces their ...
This introduction presents an overview of the key concepts discussed in the subsequent chapters of t...
The high level of profits along with low levels of gross physical investment has been characterized ...
At the peak of its success (prior to the First World War), the Lancashire industrial district was th...
This paper will consider the role of family firms, the Chandlerian ‘modern business ent...
Historically, financial crises have been commonplace. Why did the latest episode almost derail the w...
This thesis analyzes the fortunes of the U.K. cotton industry during two sharply contrasting periods...