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Corporation Concordance

Concordance status: generated from processed OCR/PDF text. Treat these as source-location aids until each passage is checked against the scan.

133 hits

Total text matches across processed Steinmetz sections.

1 sources

Sources containing at least one matched alias.

12 sections

Chapters, lectures, sections, or report divisions with matches.

Corporation, corporation

SourceHitsSections
America and the New Epoch13312
SectionSourceHitsWorkbenchLocation
Chapter 16: The Future CorporationAmerica and the New Epoch53Workbenchlines 6975-7567
Chapter 3: The Individualistic Era: From Competition to Co-operationAmerica and the New Epoch18Workbenchlines 874-1745
Chapter 13: Evolution: Industrial GovernmentAmerica and the New Epoch17Workbenchlines 5798-6232
Chapter 10: Public and Private CorporationsAmerica and the New Epoch13Workbenchlines 4716-5059
Chapter 9: America in the Individualistic EraAmerica and the New Epoch11Workbenchlines 4268-4715
Chapter 17: ConclusionAmerica and the New Epoch6Workbenchlines 7568-8027
Chapter 4: The Individualistic Era: The Other SideAmerica and the New Epoch5Workbenchlines 1746-2408
Chapter 14: Evolution: Inhibitory PowerAmerica and the New Epoch4Workbenchlines 6233-6597
Introduction 1: IntroductionAmerica and the New Epoch3Workbenchlines 87-233
Chapter 6: Germany in the Individualistic EraAmerica and the New Epoch1Workbenchlines 2776-3206
Chapter 8: America in the PastAmerica and the New Epoch1Workbenchlines 3741-4267
Chapter 12: Evolution: Political GovernmentAmerica and the New Epoch1Workbenchlines 5328-5797
Chapter 16: The Future Corporation - 53 hit(s)

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XVI THE FUTURE CORPORATION THE development of a national government by the industrial corporation presupposes that the social functions of the industrial cor- poration, which are now being developed, have been extended in all corporations and grown to ...
Chapter 3: The Individualistic Era: From Competition to Co-operation - 18 hit(s)

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... onsoli- dation is killing competition, and try to stop consolidation by breaking up the corporations, while in reality the death of competition as a beneficent industrial force is the cause of con- solidation, has led to the corporation as the only means of industrial production. Thus, not the "trusts" are killing competition, but the failure of competition is the cause of industrial consolidation, of the corporations. Thus, wherever outside forces did not ...
Chapter 13: Evolution: Industrial Government - 17 hit(s)

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XIII evolution: industrial government HIE large industrial corporation is to-day by far the most efficient organization, in spite of the inefficiency forced upon it by the political Government. It is still very crude and imperfect in many respects, and especially it is still greatly deficient ...
Chapter 10: Public and Private Corporations - 13 hit(s)

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... then apply, or adapt, the methods which have given satisfactory results, to the conditions where the results have been unsatisfactory. It is strange that in all the agitation for improving the ef- ficiency of the municipal corporation, in all the studies of commission government, municipal charters, etc., very little thought has been given to those forms of government which have proven satisfactory, efficient, and economical— the gov- ernments of the industr ...
Chapter 9: America in the Individualistic Era - 11 hit(s)

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... ization ap- proached the co-operative stage there was still a large class of small, individual producers in the West who felt their existence threatened by the rise of corporate industrial power, and were ready to fight the corporation by all means, po- litical and otherwise, in the vain attempt to avoid the inevitable, the extinction of the small producer before the higher efficiency of organ- ized corporate production. Add thereto the 123 AMERICA ...
Chapter 17: Conclusion - 6 hit(s)

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... k out our own sal- vation, on new democratic lines, a problem far greater and more difficult. The most promising structural element of the future co-operative industrial organization, in our present nation, is the industrial corporation, and on this probably the structure of co-oper- ative industrial society will be built in our democratic nation. A positive, administrative, and executive in- dustrial government, i)rofessionally comi)etent, continuous and perman ...
Chapter 4: The Individualistic Era: The Other Side - 5 hit(s)

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... ge, "class consciousness" has not become the slogan of a powerful polit- ical party, such as it did, for instance, in Ger- many, already a generation ago. ,_JWith the further development of industrial capitalism gradually the corporation took the place of the large individual employer, and the "employer's class" steadily dwindled down. First, individual personality still dominated the corporation: the "Harriman" roads, the "Van- derbilt" interests, etc. But wit ...
Chapter 14: Evolution: Inhibitory Power - 4 hit(s)

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XIV evolution: inhibitory power THE industrial corporation of to-day is or- ganized for effective constructive work; it has developed the characteristics necessary for economic efficiency — continuity of organization and at the same time flexibility to adapt itself in a high degree to ...
Introduction 1: Introduction - 3 hit(s)

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... ery cent increase of wages appears so much out of the pockets of the owner — and of corporate production, and have realized, from my acquaintance with the inside workings of numerous large corpora- tions, that the industrial corporation is not the greedy monster of popular misconception, bent only on exploitation, and have most decidedly come to the conclusion that, even as crude and INTRODUCTION undeveloped as the industrial corporation of to-day still ...
Chapter 6: Germany in the Individualistic Era - 1 hit(s)

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... that the antagonism of the masses against the corporations, which here in America paralyzes our rapid industrial progress and threatens to destroy our prosperity by in- terfering with the industries' most effective tool, the corporation, has never appeared in Ger- many, but consolidation has proceeded un- checked. The educational system was reorganized, and the university idea extended Into the industrial field, and a universal system of industrial edu- cati ...
Chapter 8: America in the Past - 1 hit(s)

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... theater-director, a physician, a minister, a lawyer are placed in administrative charge of a municipality — all good men and true, but none of them by i)rofessional experience qualified to the administration of the municipal corporation of to-day — or where a barber is placed in charge of the city water- works, a saloon-keeper in the administration of tlie public works, no matter how cai)al)le, honest, and intelh'gent the men may be, the failure of any p ...
Chapter 12: Evolution: Political Government - 1 hit(s)

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... been an established fact, has been the operating principle within all the more pro- gressive large industrial corporations, and all that is necessary is to extend methods of eco- nomic eflScicncy from the individual industrial corporation to the national organism as a whole. Thus there will be competition between water transportation and railway transportation, to decide which in each individual instance is more economical, considering quality of the trans- p ...