ABSTRACT

Central economic planning is often associated with failed state socialism, and modern capitalism celebrated as its antithesis. This book shows that central planning is not always, or even primarily, a state enterprise, and that the giant industrial corporations that dominated the American economy through the twentieth century were, first and foremost, unprecedented examples of successful, consensual central planning at a very large scale.

chapter |14 pages

Introduction

The tripod of power

part |77 pages

Islands of conscious power

chapter |23 pages

Organizing production

chapter |24 pages

Planning

chapter |24 pages

Contracts in performance

chapter |4 pages

Interlude

Choosing the future

part |147 pages

Redwoods in the garden

chapter |33 pages

Taylor's bargain

chapter |33 pages

Antitrusts

chapter |35 pages

Deciding for bigness

chapter |34 pages

Contracts at liberty

chapter |10 pages

Epilogue

“War is the health of the state”