Read The relentless revolution: a history of capitalism Online

Authors: Joyce Appleby,Joyce Oldham Appleby

Tags: #History, #General, #Historiography, #Economics, #Capitalism - History, #Economic History, #Capitalism, #Free Enterprise, #Business & Economics

The relentless revolution: a history of capitalism (74 page)

8.
Lizbeth Cohen,
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9.
Jack Garraty,
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, 356–60.
10.
Garraty,
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, 75–77.
11.
John Maynard Keynes,
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(London, 1930).
12.
Paul Krugman, “Franklin Delano Obama?,”
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November 10, 2008.
13.
Richard Overy, “About the Second World War,” excerpted from Charles Townshend, ed.,
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(New York, 1997), available at englishuiuc.edu/maps/ww2/overy, 10.
14.
Bill Gordon, “Greater East Asia Co-Prosperity Sphere,” www.wgordon.web.wesleyan.edu.; Beasley,
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15.
Geoffrey Barraclough, ed.,
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16.
Beasley,
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, 268–76.
17.
Mark Harrison, “Resource Mobilization for World War II: The U.S.A., U.K., U.S.S.R., and Germany, 1938–1945,”
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18.
Overy, “About the Second World War,” 6.
19.
Ibid., 10.
20.
Ibid., 4.

CHAPTER 10. A NEW LEVEL OF PROSPERITY

1.
Jeffrey A. Frieden,
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(2006 [paperback ed., 2007]), 287; Charles Kindleberger,
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, 2nd ed. (New York, 1993), 453.
2.
Elizabeth Borgwardt,
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3.
Kindleberger,
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, 453.
4.
Cameron,
Concise Economic History of the World,
371–78.
5.
Frieden,
Global Capitalism,
278; N. R. R. Crafts, “The Golden Age of Economic Growth in Western Europe, 1950–1973,”
Economic History Review,
48 (1995): 429–30; Angus Maddison,
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Diethelm Prowe, “Economic Democracy in Post–World War II Germany: Corporatist Crisis Response, 1945–1948,”
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57 (1985): 452–58.
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Paul L. Davies, “A Note on Labour and Corporate Governance in the U.K.,” in Klaus J. Hopt et al, eds.,
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(Oxford, 1999), 373; Martin Wolf, “European Corporatism Must Embrace Change,”
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, January 23, 2007.
8.
Maddison,
Dynamic Forces in Capitalist Development
, 274–75; Frieden,
Global Capitalism
, 289.
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John Gillingham, “The European Coal and Steel Community: An Object Lesson,” in Barry Eichengreen, ed.,
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Barry Eichengreen, “Mainsprings of Economic Recovery,” in ibid.: 6–21.
11.
Cameron,
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, 377–78.
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H. Bathelt, C. Wiseman, and G. Zakrzewski, “Automobile Industry: A ‘Driving Force’ behind the German Economy,” wwwgeog/specialist/vgt/Englisih/ger, 2.
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, 55 (1999): 149–54.
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Maddison,
Dynamic Forces in Capitalist Development
, 151; Cameron,
a Concise Economic History of the World
, 329–30.
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James F. Hollifield,
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Maddison,
Dynamic Forces in Capitalist Development
, 128; Russell Shorto, “Childless Europe: What Happens to a Continent When It Stops Making Babies?,”
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, June 29, 2008.
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Robert Higgs, “From Central Planning to the Market: The American Transition, 1945–1947,”
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59 (1999): 611–13. The wonderful list of government measures is Higgs’s.
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Tom Lewis, “The Roads to Prosperity,”
Los Angeles Times,
December 26, 2008.
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Nelson Lichtenstein,
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(Princeton, 2002), 76–80; Nelson Lichtenstein, “American Trade Unions and the ‘Labor Question’: Past and Present,” in
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(New York, 1999), 65–70.
20.
Frieden,
Global Capitalism
, 261–62; Higgs, “From Central Planning to the Market”: 600.
21.
Kindleberger,
Financial History
, 413–17.
22.
Louis Hyman, “Debtor Nation: How Consumer Credit Built Postwar America” (Ph.D. dissertation, Harvard, 2007); Karen Orren,
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(Baltimore, 1974), 127–31.
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Alfred D. Chandler, Jr.,
Inventing the Electronic Century: The Epic Story of the Consumer Electronics and Computer Industries
(New York, 2001), 27–30.
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Vanessa Schwartz, “Towards a Cultural History of the Jet Age,” Paper presented in Paris, November 13, 2008.
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Walter G. Moss,
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(New York, 2008), 2–23.
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Clark Kerr,
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( Cambridge, MA, 1963).
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Kenneth Flamm, “Technological Advance and Costs: Computers versus Communications,” in Robert W. Crandall and Kenneth Flamm, eds.,
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(Washington, 1989), 15–20.
28.
Rowena Olegario, “IBM and the Two Thomas J. Watsons,” in Thomas K. McGraw, ed.,
Creating Modern Capitalism: How Entrepreneurs, Companies, and Countries Triumphed in Three Industrial Revolutions
(Cambridge, 1997), 352.
29.
Public Papers of the Presidents of the United States
(Washington) Dwight D. Eisenhower Papers (Washington, 1960) 1035–40.
30.
J. R. McNeill,
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(New York, 2000), 149, 168–69, 178–80.
31.
Olegario, “IBM and the Two Thomas J. Watsons,” 349–93.
32.
Ibid., 350–54.
33.
Chandler,
Inventing the Electronic Century
, 91; Emerson W. Pugh,
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(Cambridge, 1984), 187–90.
34.
Olegario, “IBM and the Two Thomas J. Watsons,” 378–79.
35.
Ibid., 366–70.
36.
Robert Korstad and Nelson Lichtenstein, “Opportunities Found and Lost: Labor, Radicals, and the Early Civil Rights Movement,”
Journal of American History,
75 (1988): 786–96.
37.
Stephen F. Rohde,
Freedom of Assembly
(New York, 2005), 33–38; Frieden,
Global Capitalism
, 299–300.
38.
Roger Lowenstein, “The Prophet of Pensions,”
Los Angeles Times Opinion
, May 11, 2008.
39.
New York Times,
June 18, 2008.
40.
Crafts, “Golden Age of Economic Growth in Western Europe,” 433.
41.
Joseph A. McCartin, “A Wagner Act for Public Employees: Labor’s Deferred Dream, and the Rise of Conservatives, 1970–1976,”
Journal of American History,
95 (2008): 129–31; Tami J. Friedman, “Exploiting the North-South Differential: Corporate Power, Southern Politics, and the Decline of Organized Labor after World War II,”
Journal of American History,
95 (2008): 323–48.
42.
Frieden,
Global Capitalism
, 344.
43.
Olegario, “IBM and the Two Thomas J. Watsons,” 356.
44.
Maddison,
Dynamic Forces in Capitalist Development
, 148.
45.
Cameron,
Concise Economic History of the World
, 394.
46.
Maddison,
Dynamic Forces in Capitalist Development
, 155–167.
47.
Daniel Yergin,
The Prize: The Epic Quest for Oil, Money, and Power
(New York, 1991), 601–909.
48.
Ibid., 590–91.
49.
Barbara Weinstein, “Presidential Address: Developing Inequality,”
American Historical
Review, 113 (2008): 15.

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