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Big Is BeautifulBig Is Beautiful

Big Is Beautiful

Michael Lind, Robert D. Atkinson

About this book

"In public discourse in the United States, small businesses are lauded as drivers of the economy and keys to economic growth, while "big business" is often vilified. Even in the face of evidence that larger firms are proven to be more likely to stimulate economic growth, American public policy favors small businesses through measures such as lowering taxes or regulatory requirements for firms under a certain number of employees. The authors trace the anti-big business sentiment back to its roots in the early founding of our nation. While the Jeffersonian ideal of every citizen being self-employed made sense for a pre-industrial agrarian society, changes in technology have led to significant economies of scale for big businesses. Now, we see that countries with more self-employed workers are also more likely to be in poverty (think of emerging economies where everyone is an entrepreneur, and compare it to the compensation and benefits packages available to employees of large firms in more advanced economies). Rather than simply taking the opposite view that "bigger is better," the authors argue that a modern capitalist society has room for businesses of all sizes and that we should not be privileging one type of business over another due to size alone, especially when our perception of who creates jobs and grows the economy does not track with reality"--

Details

OL Work ID
OL20156608W

Subjects

Big businessSmall business, united statesBusiness enterprises, united statesEmployee fringe benefitsHistorySmall businessBusiness enterprisesSizeEconometric modelsCostsPolitical aspects

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HardcoverOpen Library
Book data from Open Library. Cover images courtesy of Open Library.