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Elaborations, Revisions, Dissents: Alfred D. Chandler, Jr.'s, The Visible Hand after Twenty Years
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 13 December 2010
Abstract
Two decades have passed since the publication of The Visible Hand, Alfred D. Chandler, Jr.'s, magisterial account of the rise of the modern business enterprise in the United States. Although Chandlers pathbreaking work has been widely hailed as a landmark in business history, only rarely has anyone considered systematically its influence on the large body of historical scholarship on related topics. This essay is intended to help fill this gap. It is divided into two sections. The first section reviews Chandlers argument, touches on the relationship of Chandlers oeuvre to his personal background, and locates The Visible Hand in the context of American historical writing. The second considers how three groups of historians have responded to Chandlers ideas. These groups consist of champions who creatively elaborated on Chandler's intellectual agenda; critics who probed anomalies between Chandler's argument and their own research; and skeptics who rejected Chandlers analysis outright.
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References
1 For a brief introduction to Chandler's influence on nonhistorians, see McCraw, Thomas K., “The Intellectual Odyssey of Alfred D. Chandler, Jr.,” in McCraw, , ed., The Essential Alfred Chandler: Essays Toward a Historical Theory of Big Business (Boston, Mass., 1988), esp. 13–14.Google Scholar For various interpretations of Chandler's ideas by sociologists and political scientists, see Roy, William G., Socializing Capital: The Rise of the Large Industrial Corporation in America (Princeton, N.J., 1997)Google Scholar; Fligstein, Neil, The Transformation of Corporate Control (Cambridge, Mass., 1990)Google Scholar; Winner, Langdon, The Whale and the Reactor: A Search for Limits in an Age of High Technology (Chicago, Ill., 1986)Google Scholar; and Beniger, James R., The Control Revolution: Technological and Economic Origins of the Information Society (Cambridge, Mass., 1986).Google Scholar For Chandler's influence among economists, see Lazonick, William, Business Organization and the Myth of the Market Economy (Cambridge, 1991)Google Scholar, and Williamson, Oliver E., The Economic Institutions of Capitalism: Firms, Markets, Relational Contracting (New York, 1985).Google Scholar
Though Chandler's influence among economists falls outside of the scope of this essay, Oliver Williamson's “transaction cost” interpretation of Chandler's ideas deserves a brief mention, since it has sometimes been mistakenly assumed to reflect Chandler's ideas. According to Williamson, Chandler claimed that the principal cost savings in the modern corporation derived from the ability of managers to economize on transaction and information costs. Chandler, however, always distinguished between the modest cost savings obtainable through reduction of transaction and information costs and the much larger cost savings obtainable through administrative coordination. “The savings resulting from such [administrative] coordination,” Chandler observed, “were much greater than those resulting from lower information and transaction costs.” To clarify this distinction, Chandler contrasted the cost savings obtainable through the establishment of a federation of otherwise independent business firms with the cost savings obtainable through the establishment of a moderm business enterprise. Federations, Chandler wrote, “were often able to bring small reductions in information and transactions costs, but they could not lower costs through increased productivity. They could not provide the administrative coordination that became the central function of modern business enterprise.” Chandler, Alfred D. Jr., The Visible Hand: The Managerial Revolution in American Business (Cambridge, Mass., 1977), 7–8Google Scholar (italics added). See also idem, “Organizational Capabilities and the Economic History of the Industrial Enterprise,” Journal of Economic Perspectives 6 (Summer 1992): 79–100, and Lazonick, , Business Organization, 191–261. “By imposing a transaction cost interpretation on Chandler's historical material,” Lazonick declared, “Williamson failed to comprehend the nature of the dynamic interaction between organization and technology that is central to [Chandler' s] approach,” 195.Google Scholar
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