Business Vocabulary CAPITALISM An economic system characterized by private or corporate ownership of capital goods, by investments that are determined by private decision, and by prices, production, and the distribution of goods that are determined mainly in competition in a free market. ENTREPRENEUR A person who organizes and manages an enterprise or business ROBBER BARON A term used to describe powerful business leaders during the post Civil war period PLUTOCRACY Government by the wealthy. Industrialists controlled government during late 19th Century. PHILANTHROPIST A person who gives large amounts of money to charities. Both John D. Rockefeller and Andrew Carnegie were philanthropists. POOL A pool is an informal agreement between a group of people or leaders of a company to keep their prices high and to keep competition low. The Interstate Commerce Act in 1887 made railroads publicly publish their prices and it outlawed the pool. REBATE A rebate is a deduction from an amount to be paid, or money back. Rockefeller, oil king, employed spies to find the rebates of railroads and forced the railroads to pay him the rebates on the bills of his competitors. 1 A combination of firms or corporations for the purpose of reducing competition. A trust is a legal way to share ownership— TRUST the owner still gets profits, but the trustee runs everything. (Children with property must have trustees to run the property for them.) A trust was formed when a company was forced to give control of its operations to a single holding company (run by a board of trustees). The trust was pioneered by men such as Andrew Carnegie of the steel industry and John Rockefeller of the oil industry. The purpose of a trust is to eliminate competition in business. One powerful company will have control of the stocks of many smaller companies in the same line of business, creating a monopoly. The monopoly allows price-fixing and benefits all companies involved. Trusts were outlawed in the early 1900's. VERTICAL INTEGRATION (ALSO VERTICAL TRUST, VERTICAL MERGER) It was pioneered by tycoon Andrew Carnegie. It is when you combine into one organization all phases of manufacturing from mining to marketing. This makes supplies more reliable and improved efficiency. It controlled the quality of the product at all stages of production. HORIZONTAL INTEGRATION (ALSO HORIZONTAL TRUST, HORIZONTAL MERGER) A technique used by John D. Rockefeller. Horizontal integration is an act of joining or consolidating with ones competitors to create a monopoly. Rockefeller was excellent with using this technique to monopolize certain markets. It is responsible for the majority of his wealth. INTERLOCKING DIRECTORATE A plan devised by J. Morgan to eliminate competition in the banking business during the 1890's. The same people sit on several boards of directors and control and influence all the businesses. MONOPOLY To dominate by excluding others—to gain control over all businesses making the same product, ending competition 2 ANTI-TRUST LAWS A series of laws passed by the U.S. government that tries to maintain competition and prevents business form getting a monopoly, such as the Sherman Anti-Trust Act (1890) and the Clayton Anti- Trust Act. PRICE FIXING An unlawful agreement between manufactures to maintain specified prices on usually competing companies. HOLDING COMPANY Holding companies manufactured no products and had no customers. They existed only to own stock in other corporations. VANDERBILT, CORNELIUS He was a big man with little education but he established a shipping-land transit across Nicaragua after the gold rush. He built a railway that connected New York to Chicago in 1873. He offered superior service at low rates and was extremely successful. EDISON, THOMAS A deaf Edison invented the phonograph and by 1900 it was used in over 150,000 homes. His invention made going to the symphony obsolete. He not only invented the light bulb, he invented a way to keep light on in factories around the clock. CARNEGIE, ANDREW Steel king; integrated every phase of his steelmaking operation including ships, railroads, iron and coal mines. This "Vertical Integration" improved efficiency by making supplies more reliable controlling the quality of the product at all stages of production and eliminating the middle man ROCKEFELLER, JOHN D. Standard Oil tycoon, by 1877 he controlled 95% of all of the refineries in the United States. It achieved important economies both home and abroad by its large-scale methods of production and distribution. He also organized the trust and started the Horizontal Merger. MORGAN, J. PIERPONT He was a banker who financed the reorganization of railroads, insurance companies, and banks. He bought out Carnegie and in 1901 he started the United States Steel Corporation. 3 CORPORATION a business authorized by law to act as if it was a single person. A corporation pays taxes and can be sued. Liability (blame for any problems) goes to the corporation and not to the president or the stockholders. A corporation must be incorporated, that is it must file legal papers to be created. C.E.O. stands for CHIEF EXECUTIVE OFFICER, the President of the Corporation. He does not own it, but is an employee, appointed by the Board of Directors. 4