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Robber Barons or Captains of Industry?

Robber Barons or Captains of Industry?. 11.2.5 Discuss corporate mergers that produced trusts and cartels and the economic and political policies of industrial leaders. . Homework. Read and take Cornell Notes on section 14.2 to prepare for an activity on Tuesday.

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Robber Barons or Captains of Industry?

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  1. Robber Barons or Captains of Industry? 11.2.5 Discuss corporate mergers that produced trusts and cartels and the economic and political policies of industrial leaders.

  2. Homework • Read and take Cornell Notes on section 14.2 to prepare for an activity on Tuesday. • Challenge Option – Come up with 8 cause and effect statements from the reading. • Example: The South had fewer people  they lost the Civil War

  3. 3 New Vocabulary words… • Mass Production – Used by Henry Ford to make cars more affordable. • Monopoly: Oil and steel industries were both controlled by monopolies at the beginning of industrialization. • Trust: a set of companies managed by a small group known as trustees, who can prevent companies in the trust from competing with each other. If all search engines were controlled by the same people. • Corporation: Google, Netflix, Apple. Any company that sells stocks.

  4. HOT ROC: • Do billionaires have a responsibility to help the poor? • Do millionaires? • *HW Check • Organizational Categories for your project. • Project Reminder: • Essay outline with a thesis statement for the project is due on Friday

  5. Simulation • T-shirt shops • where will you shop?

  6. Big Business and the Government • Horizontal and Vertical Integration • Textbook, page 171

  7. Andrew Carnegie$75 Billion • Don’t take notes on this section • Andrew Carnegie came from Scotland with his parents in 1848. • In 1861, at the age of 26, he started up the Freedom Iron Company, and used the new Bessemer process for making steel • He formed all of his companies into the Carnegie Steel Company in 1899, which controlled raw materials, manufacturing, storage, and distribution for steel. • Vertical Integration

  8. John D. Rockefeller$192 Billion • Don’t take notes on this section • Born in 1839 • His working life started as a bookkeeper • He established one of the first oil refineries • 1870—With partners, forms a business trust: Standard Oil • At its peak, controls 90% of all oil companies • Horizontal Integration

  9. The Gilded Age…1870s-1900 • Where was the most money made? • Was this positive or negative for America?

  10. What would Rockefeller say… • Monopolies are good because we can produce goods at a lower cost to consumers! • Now everyone can have cheap oil and gas. • We use our wealth to benefit others through our charitable donations (philanthropy)

  11. Big Business and the Government: POV Leave Business Alone Limit Business Sherman Anti-Trust Act 1911--Splits Rockefeller’s Standard Oil into 34 companies (A U.S. Court of Appeals found in 2001 that Microsoft violated the Sherman Act antitrust law.) • Laissez-faire • Social Darwinism

  12. What would the Populists (poor farmers) say? • Monopolies are bad because they control the whole industry and there is no competition over prices. • We have to pay high prices to ship our wheat on the trains! • And these companies pay low wages to their workers!

  13. Draw a Below the Surface graphic from each point of view… • 1. According to Rockefeller—monopolies are like… • 2. According to the Populists—monopolies are like…

  14. Who are the billionaires (Robber Barons) of today?

  15. Forbes 2011

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