This
unique volume presents a theory
of capitalist collective action
and a case study of the pre-World
War II American coal industry
to which the theory is applied.
The author examines the irony
of capitalist firms that do
not want to compete with each
other, but often cannot avoid
doing so. He then explains
under what conditions businesses
would be able to organize their
competition and identifies
the economic and political
factors that facilitate or
inhibit this organization.
The case study not only illustrates
the theory, but demonstrates
how the competitive relations
of capitalist firms are critically
important determinants of their
political behavior. |