1 / 22

Section 2 The Growth of Big Business

Section 2 The Growth of Big Business. Web Diagram. From Section 2 Create the following web. Definitions. Capitol- money, ideas, buildings that accompany big business Robber Barons- Business leaders built their fortunes by stealing from the public

missy
Télécharger la présentation

Section 2 The Growth of Big Business

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Section 2 The Growth of Big Business

  2. Web Diagram • From Section 2 • Create the following web

  3. Definitions • Capitol- money, ideas, buildings that accompany big business • Robber Barons-Business leaders built their fortunes by stealing from the public • Captains of Industry-Business leaders served their nations in positive ways • Philanthropy-Giving money away to charity.

  4. People and monopolies • John D. Rockefeller-Standard Oil Company • Andrew Carnegie-Carnegie Steel • AT&T –Telephone company (split into Lucent Technology and NCR) • Swift and Armour – Capitalists who turned were called “Meat kings of Chicago.” An engineer created a refrigerated cattle car. • General Electric- Electric Power Grid • Westinghouse- • DuPont-plastics company

  5. Definitions • Social Darwinism-Only the fittest businesses would survive in an economy. • Start ups-A business that is just in the beginning stages to enter the industry. • Broader range of Operations-Less specialization than in the past, all stages of production are now covered. • Professional Manager-Not the business owners but who oversee its operations. • Accounting- A new system for controlling resources

  6. Supply and Demand of the New iphone 5

  7. Sample Supply and Demand Problems • Make 4 Supply and Demand graphs on your paper • Make the Equilibrium point at (5,5) • Question #1) There is an increase in the Demand Curve, What happens to the Price and the Quantity supplied? • Question #2) There is an increase in the Supply curve, What happens to the price and quantity supplied? • Question #3) There is a decrease in the Supply Curve, What happens to the price and quantity supplied? • Question #4) There is a decrease in the Demand Curve, what happens to the price and quantity supplied?

  8. Economic Market structures • Oligopoly-A few large firms dominate the market because of high start-up costs. • Monopoly- Complete control of a product or service, • Cartel-A loose association of a few large companies which control supply of a product causing the prices to go up.

  9. Economic Market structures • Vertical Consolidation- When a large company gains/buys many other companies to gain control of all phases of a products development. • Economies of Scale-As production increases , the cost of each item produced is • Horizontal Consolidation-When a company buys many different companies in the same business

  10. Economic Market structures • Trust-When a company uses horizontal consolidation, forms a board of trustees which manages the profits. Usually controlled by a single person • Example:Standard Oil and John D. Rockefeller • Sherman Anti-Trust Act-1890 • Congressional law which attempted to prevent a single company control over an industry.

  11. Definitions • Piecework-When an employee is paid per item produced, regardless of time • Sweatshop-A workplace that is often in poor working conditions, long hours, laws regarding hours, child labor, and cleanliness are overlooked. • Division of Labor-A complex process which is broken down into simpler tasks, so that each individual worker has one taskMass production

  12. Section 3

  13. Unions • Socialism-an economic and political philosophy which favors the public instead of private control of property and income • Unions-A group of workers united for common goals, such as shorter work days, higher wages, better working conditions • 1STNational Trades Union (1837) • Knights of Labor 1869- Philadelphia, PA • Hoped to organize all working men and women • AFL (1886) Still around today, it was formed as a craft union for only skilled workers. • Collective Bargaining-Workers bargain for more things as a single group rather than as individuals

  14. Unions • Wobblies- Formed off of the AFL, formed a radical group of unskilled workers who protested violently at times. • Eugene Debs-helped organize the railroad workers and was influential in the start-up of many strikes.

  15. Railroad Strikes • Great Railroad Strike of 1877- • Violent protests against long working hours and wage cuts which spread to many different cities, President Hayes sent in troops to put down the strike. • Haymarket Strike of 1886- • In Chicago, factory workers wanted an 8 hr work day, and were fighting with scabs, threw a bomb at police that started riots. • Scabs-people who work for the factories who either didn’t join in the strike or people who were hired to replace them. Anarchists-people who oppose the federal government

  16. Strikes • Homestead Strike of 1892-Carnegie steel mills strike • Plant manager wouldn’t cave into demands of the Union • Pinkertons-a private police force who were known to break up strikes, which eventually became the secret service • The plant re-opened under military protection • Pullman Strike of 1894 • George Pullman an inventor of a luxury sleeping car, created a town for his workers to live and work in but with strict control over their personal lives • Railroads were shut down for over a month, but the railroad owners appealed to the federal government for help under the Sherman Anti-trust Act. • Workers organized a successful strike for 2 months but the military was ultimately set in and the strike was over

  17. Strikes • So why are there so many strikes at this time during the Industrial revolution? (24,000 between 1870-1900) • Growth of industrial jobs, influx of immigration,

  18. Section 4

  19. Immigration • Map Europe- • On your own label these countries and their capitols • Italy Spain • Sweden Germany • Poland Russia • France Ireland • Norway Great Britain • RomaniaScotland

  20. Immigration and Definitions • Population doubled during the years between 1865-1920 from 30 million to 65 million • Pogroms- • Steerage- • Quarantine-

  21. Immigration and settlements • Ghettos-Living arrangements which are generally crowded and poor where people of a specific minority group in a large city reside. • Restrictive Settlements- Where people would not sell property or real estate to certain ethnic minorities.

  22. Western Immigration • Chinese • Most came during the construction of the transcontinental railroad during the 1850s. • Most were working to pay off their debt for coming to the country and would work for almost any wage. • Chinese Exclusion Act of 1882. • Prohibited Chinese laborers from entering the country. • Immigration timeline

More Related