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Untitled Flashcards Set

The Rise of Big Business β€” The Gilded Age:Β 

  • Progressive AgeΒ 

  • Railroads important β†’ first great concentrations of wealthΒ 

    • Creation of uniform time zonesΒ 

    • Access to remote marketsΒ 

  • However, the wealth accumulated in very few individualsΒ 

    • As a result, unions popped upΒ 

  • Steel was produced a lot as it was strong β†’ thus no need to constantly main steel & buildings/objects made of steelΒ 

    • Era of SteelΒ 

    • Everything had steel in itΒ 

  • Coal and steam β†’ electricity, oil, gasolineΒ 

    • Electricity β€” a versatile form of energyΒ 

  • New technologies from electricity:Β 

    • Electric carsΒ 

    • LightsΒ 

    • Homes were litΒ 

      • Middle-class could live farther away from the city β€” electric carsΒ 

      • They could go out at night β€” street lightsΒ 

        • Lights = safetyΒ 

  • Alexander Graham Bell β€” created the telephone in 1886Β 

    • Telephones sped up communications for businessesΒ 

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The Gold Standard:Β 

  • US joined the Gold Standard in the 1870sΒ 

  • Amount of money in circulation was equal to the amount of gold in banksΒ 

    • Therefore, the government can’t just print money all it wantsΒ 

  • However, it does lower the amount of money circulationΒ 

    • Less money to go aroundΒ 

    • Hard for small businesses and those in debt to take out a loanΒ 

  • In circulation β€” how much physical cash in the US outside of the Fed reserveΒ 

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Corporate Economy:Β 

  • Trust β€” any large corporation that seemed to wield excessive power (colloquial)Β 

  • Monopolies and oligopolies stifle innovation

    • There was no need to innovate as they were so powerful and dominated the market β†’ no competition β†’ no innovationΒ 

      • Economy stagnatesΒ 

    • Β Can take control of the market:Β 

      • Bought other small businessesΒ 

        • Coercion, predatory pricing β€” a couple of tacticsΒ Β 

    • Can set a huge price on their goods β€” no competitionΒ 

      • Therefore, consumers have to pay moreΒ 

        • Less money in other parts of the economyΒ 

The 4 Titans of Industry & Robber Barons:Β 

  • John D Rockefeller β€” oilΒ 

  • Cornelius Vanderbilt β€” railroadsΒ 

  • Andrew Carnegie β€” steelΒ 

  • John Pierpont Morgan β€” finance & bankingΒ 

  • The corporate economy was not only run by the 4 men

    • Including all who worked for those companiesΒ 

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Assembly Line:Β Β 

  • Gustavus Swift invented the assembly lineΒ 

  • Deskilling of laborΒ 

    • One person has one job β†’ knows only how to do that one job β†’ by extension only one skillΒ 

      • Master of one stepΒ 

      • Don’t know the steps before and afterΒ 

        • Therefore, the workers were worth lessΒ 

  • Smaller businesses are hurt y efficient large scale operationsΒ 

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Vertical Integration:Β 

  • Control all aspects of production from beginning to endΒ 

    • Can cut costs and save moneyΒ 

      • Predatory pricing was not yet illegalΒ Β 

Horizontal Integration:Β 

  • Merge with competitor companies to gain a market advantageΒ 

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Quest for Efficiency:Β 

Mechanization of Labor:Β 

  • More machines β†’ fewer humansΒ 

    • The humans needed to fix and oversee the machinesΒ 

  • Machines were more efficientΒ 

  • More efficiency β†’ cheaper goods β†’ more consumers can buyΒ 

  • Deskilling of labor comes tooΒ 

    • Only need to oversee the machines or know only 1 skillΒ 

      • Increases interchangeability of workersΒ 

  • Economy gets better in the late 1800sΒ 

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Scientific Management:Β 
  • Study the best way to make thingsΒ 

  • Frederick Taylor β€” Taylorism

    • Pioneer of scientific managementΒ Β 

  • Used rules to govern worker behaviorΒ 

    • Timed the workers β†’ more efficiencyΒ 

    • Time card machineΒ 

      • Punched hole and recorded the time when the worker comes in and leavesΒ 

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Working Conditions & Labor:Β 

  • OSHA β€” occupational safety hazard administrationΒ 

    • Made in 1971Β Β 

    • Workers protections administration in the US governmentΒ 

      • Not there in the Gilded AgeΒ 

        • So many people had to get injured before something was brought up in Congress for workers protectionΒ 

  • Dangerous conditions and there was no regulationsΒ 

    • 1 in 20 railroad workers died/disabledΒ 

    • 2000 coal miners died per yearΒ 

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Child Labor:Β 
  • Child’s income supplemented family’s incomeΒ 

    • How poorly parents were being paidΒ 

  • Child β€” not much educationΒ 

  • Louis Han took pictures of children working to show CongressΒ 

    • Educate prosperous Americans about factory life and child laborΒ 

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Immigrants as Laborers:Β 
  • Immigrants were another source for cheap laborΒ 

  • Between the Civil War and WWI β€” 20+ million people immigrated to the USΒ 

  • 75+% of NYC and San Francisco residents had 1 foreign born parentΒ 

  • Immigrants were far more desperate, so they accepted lower wagesΒ 

  • Different languages β†’ hard to organize unionsΒ 

  • If there were an economic downturn β†’ immigrants went back to the home countryΒ 

Consequent Economy:Β 

  • Department stores popped upΒ 

    • 1 place where different shops rent part of the space and sell their stuff thereΒ 

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Classes of Workers:Β 
  • Blue Collar and White Collar workersΒ 

    • Blue Collar β€” labor, using your body to workΒ 

    • White Collar β€” use your brain to workΒ 

  • Middle management and sales positions increasedΒ 

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Women and the Economy:Β 
  • Women worked in secretarial positionsΒ 

  • Women also worked in the department stores:Β 

    • Put makeup on you that type of workΒ 

  • End of the 1800s, 77% of women were stenographersΒ 

    • Women were skilled laborersΒ 

  • Women got advantage through labor saving devicesΒ 

    • Canned food β€” can use whenever convenientΒ 

      • Cans were good at preserving foodΒ 

    • VacuumsΒ 

    • Sewing machinesΒ 

    • Therefore, women got extra timeΒ 

      • Had a social life, could get a job as a resultΒ 

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