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Ing. Tomáš Dudáš, PhD.
3. Famous US industrialists in the 19th century Cornelius Vanderbilt
J. P. Morgan
John D. Rockefeller
Leland Stanford
Henry Clay Frick
John Jacob Astor
Andrew Carnegie
James Buchanan Duke
4. Famous US industrialists in the 19th century Cornelius Vanderbilt - railroads
J. P. Morgan – banking, finance, steel industry
John D. Rockefeller – Standard Oil
Leland Stanford - railroads
Henry Clay Frick – steel industry
John Jacob Astor – fur trade, real estate
Andrew Carnegie – railroads, steel industry
James Buchanan Duke - tobacco
7. The Economic Effects of the Civil War Approximately 600 000 people died on both sides – 9 % of the male population in the age group 15-39
Another 500 000 were wounded
Estimated loss of human capital – 1,8 billion USD on both sides
Direct government expenditures – 2,3 billion in the North, 1 billion in the South
Destruction of property – 1,5 billion USD (mainly in the South)
On the other hand – the war was a great source of income for someone
8. Railroads and Economic Development The construction of railroads continued after the civil war
By 1910 the USA had 351 767 miles of track, of which 266 000 were main track
Constructing the American railroads was one of the biggest efforts in the American history
Three major waves – 1868/73, 1879/83 and 1886/92
The majority of the construction was financed by borrowed money
Government help – subsidies and land grants
9. Agriculture between 1860 and 1910 Huge expansion of farm output – extensive growth
No chemical and biological improvements available
Slow mechanization
10. Population growth and the Atlantic migration Strong migration – 37 million people came from Europe between 1840 and 1920
Sources - 6 million from Germany; 4.5 million from Ireland; 4.75 million from Italy; 4.2 million people from England, Scotland and Wales; 4.2 million from the Austro-Hungarian Empire; 2.3 million from Scandinavia; and 3.3 million people from Russia (mostly Jews, and Poles and Lithuanian Catholics)
On the other hand, domestic fertility was decreasing (41,1 births/1000 people in 1860 compared to 29,2 births/1000 people in 1910)
11. Population growth and the Atlantic migration Other demographic trends
Continuing rise in the population living in urban areas
The country continued to spread out geographically
The percentage of foreign born rose, especially from Europe
The nonwhite portion of the population continued to fall
12. The rise of the heavy industry Industry growth rates between 1860-1910
Machinery – 690 %
Lumber – 650 %
Printing and publishing – 520 %
Iron and Steel – 310 %
Men’s clothing – 260 %
Railroad Cars – 205 %
13. The rise of the heavy industry American manufacturing production surpassed the combined total of Great Britain, Germany, and France
Railroads opened new areas to commercial farming, creating a truly national marketplace and inspiring a boom in coal mining and steel production
By 1900, the process of economic concentration had extended into most branches of industry—a few large corporations, called "trusts", dominated in steel, oil, sugar, meatpacking, and the manufacture of agriculture machinery
Increased mechanization of industry is a major mark of the this era’s search for cheaper ways to create more product
14. Innovation The United States became a world leader in applied technology. From 1860 to 1890, 500,000 patents were issued for new inventions—over ten times the number issued in the previous seventy years
George Westinghouse invented air brakes for trains (making them both safer and faster). Theodore Vail established the American Telephone & Telegraph Company. Thomas A. Edison invented a remarkable number of electrical devices, as well as the integrated power plant capable of lighting multiple buildings simultaneously
Oil became an important resource, beginning with the Pennsylvania oil fields. Kerosene replaced whale oil and candles for lighting
Frederick Taylor – innovation in management science
15. Examples of key inventions in the late 19th century in the USA Alexander Graham Bell
Telephone
Thomas Alva Edison
Light bulb
Phonograph
Levi Strauss
Blue jeans
Nikola Tesla
Radio
Christopher Latham Sholes
Typewriter
John Pemberton
Coca-cola
16. Economic crises Panic of 1873
Start of the long (or great) depression (until 1879 – 65 months)
It began with a crash on the Vienna Stock exchange
Panic of 1893
It was caused by railroad overbuilding and shaky railroad financing which set off a series of bank failures – similar to the tech bubble
In total over 15,000 companies and 500 banks failed
17. International economic relations of the USA International trade
The share of USA was growing – 9,1 % in 1890
Shift from agricultural products to industrial
Trade with Europe dominated
From the start of the 20th century the current account of the BoP recorded surpluses
Heavy protectionism in the USA
International capital flow
During the turn of the centuries USA changed from international debtor to creditor
18. Big business and government intervention Rise of big business – huge wave of mergers during the last years of 19th century
1892 – merger of Edison General Electric and Thomson-Houston Electric Company to form General Electric
1901 – merger of Carnegie Steel Company and several other steel and iron businesses to form the United States Steel Corporation
Rise of Standard Oil – one of the first multinational enterprises
21. Why did corporations grow? Innovation produced economy of scale in the industry
Declining transportation costs encouraged growth of optimal plant sizes
Developing financial services in the capital markets made it easier for individual firms to achieve economies of scale
Expansion of domestic and international markets made enlarged plat size profitable
Mergers are used to control markets (instead of cartels)
Other…
22. Government response Growing regulation of big business
Railways – Interstate Commerce Commission
Antitrust acts
The Sherman Act (1890)
It was the first Federal statute to limit cartels and monopolies, and today still forms the basis for most antitrust litigation by the United States federal government
Standard Oil – “unreasonable monopoly” - 1911
23. Most important Standard Oil successors Standard Oil of New Jersey (SONJ) - or Esso (S.O.) – renamed Exxon, now part of ExxonMobil. Standard Trust companies Carter Oil, Imperial Oil (Canada), and Standard of Louisiana were kept as part of Standard Oil of New Jersey after the breakup.
Standard Oil of New York – or Socony, merged with Vacuum – renamed Mobil, now part of ExxonMobil.
Standard Oil of California – or Socal – renamed Chevron, became ChevronTexaco, but returned to Chevron.
Standard Oil of Indiana - or Stanolind, renamed Amoco (American Oil Co.) – now part of BP.
Standard's Atlantic and the independent company Richfield merged to form Atlantic Richfield or ARCO, now part of BP. Atlantic operations were spun off and bought by Sunoco.
Standard Oil of Kentucky – or Kyso was acquired by Standard Oil of California - currently Chevron.
Continental Oil Company – or Conoco now part of ConocoPhillips.
Standard Oil of Ohio – or Sohio now part of BP.
The Ohio Oil Company – more commonly referred to as "The Ohio", and marketed gasoline under the Marathon name. The company is now known as Marathon Oil Company, and was often a rival with the in-state Standard spinoff, Sohio.
24. Henry Ford – man of a new era He was born in 1863 in Michigan in a farming family
He never liked farm life, so he left to Detroit in 1879 to work as an apprentice machinist
He worked for Westinghouse and later for Edison
1896 – experiments with Ford Quadricycle
1899 – Ford founded Detroit Automobile Company
1901 - Henry Ford Company
1902 - Ford & Malcomson, Ltd. later renamed as Ford Motor Company
1908 – Ford Model T (15 million sold)
1913 – Moving assembly belts