
Contents
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12.1 Introduction 12.1 Introduction
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12.2 A Typology of Interfirm Cooperation 12.2 A Typology of Interfirm Cooperation
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12.3 Scale and Scope of Cartels (Periodization) 12.3 Scale and Scope of Cartels (Periodization)
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12.4 Cartels, Strategy, and Corporate Organization 12.4 Cartels, Strategy, and Corporate Organization
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12.5 Conclusions 12.5 Conclusions
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References References
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12 Cartels
Get accessJeffrey Fear is an Associate Professor at the University of Redlands in the United States. He previously taught at Harvard Business School and the University of Pennsylvania. He has a Ph.D. in history from Stanford University. His research interests include the study of organizational capabilities and learning, German and European history, and specializes in German business history. His book, entitled Organizing Control: August Thyssen and the Construction of German Management (Cambridge, Mass., 2005) combines each of these interests. He has published widely in journals.
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Published:02 September 2009
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Abstract
The strategy of most major business firms has to take into consideration cartels. This article discusses how firms can expect to behave inside cartels (firms as unitary actors), and how cartels altered corporate strategy and organizational development (decision making and internal processes). It offers an array of different cartel types that blur the distinction between legitimate cooperation and illegitimate collusion. It is actually difficult to decide when a cartel is a cartel and what cartel success means, let alone if it acts inefficiently or destructively. The article argues that the voluminous scale and scope of cartels before 1939, together with lingering cartelization after 1945 in Europe and Japan, means that any analysis of entrepreneurship, corporate strategy, and organization, as well as national economic development, must incorporate the impact of cartels. It also discusses the impact of cartels on economic and corporate development.
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