As soon as we go into details and inquire into the individual items in which progress was most conspicuous, the trail leads not to the doors of those firms that work under conditions of comparatively free competition but precisely to the doors of the... Schumpeter's Market: Enterprise and Evolution - Página 81por David A. Reisman - 2004 - 294 páginasVista previa limitada - Acerca de este libro
| Lee R. Martin - 1977 - 559 páginas
...understand the origins of progress even though available theories and data are woefully inadequate. into the individual items in which progress was most...competition but precisely to the doors of the large concerns ..." There is some agreement that Schumpeter had in mind the firm with market power rather than the... | |
| George R. Feiwel - 1985 - 512 páginas
...p. 82) stresses the fact that technical progress most conspicuously originated in industrial giants. 'As soon as we go into details and inquire into the...but precisely to the doors of the large concerns.' Thus it is not sufficient to argue that.. . the large-scale establishment or unit of control must be... | |
| John Cunningham Wood - 1991 - 376 páginas
...output has been greatest since the advent of what is loosely termed "large-scale" industry. Moreover: As soon as we go into details and inquire into the...competition but precisely to the doors of the large concern— which, as in the case of agricultural machinery, also account for much of the progress in... | |
| Luís M. B. Cabral - 2000 - 374 páginas
...dynamic point of view, an argument can be made in favor of market power: As soon as we go into the details and inquire into the individual items in which...competition but precisely to the doors of the large This argument is one of the central points of the Austrian school, led by its greatest exponent, J.... | |
| William Lee Baldwin, John T. Scott - 2001 - 194 páginas
...analytic effort. In this book, this preanalytic cognitive act will be called Vision." 1 asserted that: As soon as we go into details and inquire into the...competition but precisely to the doors of the large concerns . . . and a shocking suspicion dawns upon us that big business may have had more to do with creating... | |
| Federico Etro - 2007 - 296 páginas
...fundamental role of established large firms in driving technological progress has probably been Schumpeter: "As soon as we go into details and inquire into the...competition but precisely to the doors of the large concerns which, as in the case of agricultural machinery, also account for much of the progress in the competitive... | |
| Richard B. McKenzie, Dwight R. Lee - 2008 - 334 páginas
..."As soon as we go into the details and inquire into the individual items in which progress has been most conspicuous, the trail leads not to the doors...competition but precisely to the doors of the large concerns — which, as in the case of agricultural machinery, also account for much of the progress in the competitive... | |
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