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8. Between Parent and “Child,” IBM and Its German Subsidiary, 1910–1945
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Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter i
- Dedication v
- Contents vii
- Preface ix
-
PART I Introductory Essays
- 1. Business, Political Risk, and Historians in the Twentieth Century 1
- 2. Multinationals and Dictatorship: Europe in the 1930s and early 1940s 22
-
PART II Authoritarian Regimes as Competitive Advantage and Liability
- 3. Competition and Collaboration among the Axis Multinational Insurers: Munich Re, Generali, and Riunione Adriatica, 1933–1943 39
- 4. Market Assessment and Domestic Political Risk: The Case of Degussa and Carbon Black in Nazi Germany, 1933–1939 62
-
PART III The Perception and Management of Political Risk in Dictatorial Business Environments: Outward Investment and Capital Flight
- 5. German Pharmaceutical Companies in South America: The Case of Schering AG in Argentina 79
- 6. Multinational Jewish Businesses and the Transfer of Capital Abroad in the Face of “Aryanization,” 1933–1939 103
- 7. Siemens in Eastern Europe: From the End of World War I to the End of World War II 122
-
PART IV The Problem of Foreignness
- 8. Between Parent and “Child,” IBM and Its German Subsidiary, 1910–1945 147
- 9. The Great Northern Telegraph Company and Dictatorship 174
- 10. Managing Risk in the Third Reich: British Business with Germany in the 1930s 194
- 11. Under Threat of Nazi Occupation: The Fate of Multinationals in the Czech Lands, 1938–1945 206
- 12. Industrial Capitalism and Political Constraints: the Bureaucratization of Economic Life during the Fascist Regime 223
- Notes on Contributors 235
- Bibliography 239
- Index 249
Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter i
- Dedication v
- Contents vii
- Preface ix
-
PART I Introductory Essays
- 1. Business, Political Risk, and Historians in the Twentieth Century 1
- 2. Multinationals and Dictatorship: Europe in the 1930s and early 1940s 22
-
PART II Authoritarian Regimes as Competitive Advantage and Liability
- 3. Competition and Collaboration among the Axis Multinational Insurers: Munich Re, Generali, and Riunione Adriatica, 1933–1943 39
- 4. Market Assessment and Domestic Political Risk: The Case of Degussa and Carbon Black in Nazi Germany, 1933–1939 62
-
PART III The Perception and Management of Political Risk in Dictatorial Business Environments: Outward Investment and Capital Flight
- 5. German Pharmaceutical Companies in South America: The Case of Schering AG in Argentina 79
- 6. Multinational Jewish Businesses and the Transfer of Capital Abroad in the Face of “Aryanization,” 1933–1939 103
- 7. Siemens in Eastern Europe: From the End of World War I to the End of World War II 122
-
PART IV The Problem of Foreignness
- 8. Between Parent and “Child,” IBM and Its German Subsidiary, 1910–1945 147
- 9. The Great Northern Telegraph Company and Dictatorship 174
- 10. Managing Risk in the Third Reich: British Business with Germany in the 1930s 194
- 11. Under Threat of Nazi Occupation: The Fate of Multinationals in the Czech Lands, 1938–1945 206
- 12. Industrial Capitalism and Political Constraints: the Bureaucratization of Economic Life during the Fascist Regime 223
- Notes on Contributors 235
- Bibliography 239
- Index 249