27: The Hollow Corporation
“Business is better understood by reference to the stage of industrialisation, which differs across the United States, China and Bangladesh, than it is through the language of capitalism and socialism.
Related Quotes
Leslie Hannah, an eminent business historian, has shown how the ‘rationalisation’ of industry, which was favoured by the British Government (represented by the Bank of England), set the stage for the new ‘corporate economy’ which would characterise Britain for decades. The 1920s saw the creation by merger of ICI (chemicals), the Distillers Company (Scotch whisky) and Unilever (soap and margarine). A similar wave of mergers in Germany established IG Farben and Vereinigte Stahlwerke as the dominant chemical and steel producers respectively. (Both these companies were dissolved by the victorious Allies in 1945.)
PART 6: The Corporation in the 21st Century
24: Combinations and Capabilities
“The modern firm is a community, rather than an office or a factory. It is defined not by its plant and machinery but by its capabilities. The successful business is characterised by the distinctive nature of its collection of capabilities and the match between these capabilities and the needs of its customers – and other stakeholders. The claim that George W. Bush told Tony Blair that ‘the problem with the French is that they don’t have a word for entrepreneur’ is, sadly, apocryphal.
For Penrose, the firm was defined not by the assets it owned or the contracts it made but by its capabilities and its ability to deploy those capabilities in productive services: ‘All the evidence we have indicates that the growth of firms is connected with the attempts of a particular group of people to do something.’ Perhaps that seems obvious. But her emphasis
on ‘the group’ recognises the centrally cooperative nature of business activity, and her identification of purpose – ‘to do something’ – establishes its problem-related focus.
These hollow corporations share the characteristic that the activities of the business have been pared down to the single link in the chain of production at which the corporation holds a distinctive capability and enjoys a competitive advantage. Richard Langlois, a business historian, identifies this as a key reason for the change in the corporate landscape, enabled by the growth of ‘market-supporting institutions’ which enabled entrepreneurs to easily access support for business functions where they didn’t have a comparative advantage. If the assembly line was the defining innovation in business method of twentieth-century manufacturing activity, the hollow corporation may be the defining innovation in business method of twenty-first-century digital activity.
I believe it is appropriate – indeed necessary – to view the business organisation in the same way. The proper goal of corporate activity is the flourishing of the multiple stakeholders of the corporation: employees, investors, suppliers and customers, the communities in which it operates and the corporation itself. For the corporation to flourish, it must contribute to the flourishing of the society in which it operates. And ‘the doctrine of the mean’ is as relevant to the business organisation as it is to the individual. The directors and executives of a flourishing company operate within a mediating hierarchy, which meets the needs of all its stakeholders, gives them an opportunity for voice and protects the business from the adverse consequences of stakeholder exit.