Published online by Cambridge University Press: 18 February 2015
Is it really useful to focus the interest of business historians on major companies that failed in recent years, like Parmalat in Italy or Enron in the United States? What can we learn from studying cases like that of the French company Schneider, a first mover in metallurgy, armaments, and nuclear energy, which for almost 150 years dominated the company town Le Creusot, where the Business History Conference held its fiftieth anniversary meeting in 2004, but which has now disappeared?
1. I have deliberately retained the conversational tone of my presentation at the 2004 Business History Conference in Le Creusot, but have extensively revised its text.
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16. I owe the idea of this parallel to William M. Reddy.
17. Fraud and counterfeiting are the themes of the triennial congress of the French Economic History Association in November 2004.
18. In English, see Jean-Baptiste, Say, An Economist in Troubled Times: Writings (Princeton, N.J., 1997).Google Scholar My thanks to French sociologists Philippe Steiner, François Vatin, and Michel Villette for drawing my attention to this often forgotten analysis.
19. In this vein, compare the remarkable works by Martin, Jean-Clément, Commerce et commerçants à Niort au XIXe siècle: les faillites (Niort, France, 1980)Google Scholar; and “Le commerçant, la faillite et l’historien,” Annales E.S.C. 52 (Nov.-Dec. 1980): 1251-68.
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24. Ibid., 304-9.
25. Ibid., 303.
26. Ibid., 303, 309-12; to be fair, one of the five scenarios for the future of this firm that the authors imagine (312-314) is quite the opposite: “producing disasters through passivity.”
27. Olivier Zunz is researching a history of philanthropy in the United States since the 1860s. He presented a first paper at the BHC in Le Creusot.
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37. This point that I stressed in my oral address is now covered by Englander, Ernie and Kaufman, Allen, “The End of Managerial Ideology: From Corporate Social Responsibility to Corporate Social Indifference,” Enterprise & Society 5 (Sept. 2004): 404-50.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
38. For a path-breaking article, see Tilly, Richard, “Moral Standards and Business Behaviour in Nineteenth-Century Germany and Britain,” in Bourgeois Society in Nineteenth-Century Europe, ed. Kocka, Jürgen and Mitchell, Allan (New York, 1993), 179–206.Google Scholar
39. Kristensen and Zeitlin, Local Players in Global Games. The authors actually draw a list of such proposals for today.
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48. In Japan, for instance, an association called Shippai Gakkai, a nonprofit organization with the English name “Association for the Study of Failure,” was established in Nov. 2002. Its purpose is stated as follows: “The human act of production is always accompanied with accidents and failures. These events include tedious ones to those that lead to economic loss, injury, or even large catastrophic ones that include even death. The Study of Failure identifies the cause of these accidents and failures; it further offers ways to prevent such accidents and failures that cause economic loss and fatality.” URL: http://www.shippai.org/eshippai/html/.
49. McKenna, “Mementos.”
50. Midler, Christophe, L’auto qui n’existait pas (Paris, 1993).Google Scholar See also Christensen, Clayton, The Innovator’s Dilemma: When New Technologies Cause Great Firms to Fail (Boston, 1997).Google Scholar
51. For a striking example of such a tendency, see Beaud, Claude, “Le drame de Creusot-Loire: échec industriel ou fiasco politico-financier,” Entreprises et Histoire 10 (June 2001): 7–23 Google Scholar; continued in “Heurs et malheurs de Creusot-Loire (1985-2001),” Entreprises et Histoire 12 (June 2003): 152-62.
52. Graham, RCA and the Videodisk; Charles Perrow, Normal Accidents.
53. Colli, Andrea, The History of Family Business, 1850-2000 (Cambridge, U.K., 2003)Google Scholar; Lipartito, “Picturephone and the Information Age,” 80n95.
54. Bomann-Larsen, Lene and Wiggen, Oddny, eds., Responsibility in World Business: Managing Harmful Side Effects of Corporate Activity (Washington, D.C., 2004).Google Scholar