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Topic: Decartelization


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  Decartelization - Definition from Investor Dictionary - Define meaning of the word Decartelization
Decartelization is the transition of a national economy from monopoly control by groups of large businesses, known as cartels, to a free market economy.
This change rarely arises naturally, and is generally the result of regulation by a governing body.
A modern example of decartelization is the economic restructuring of Germany after the fall of the Third Reich in 1945.
www.investordictionary.com /definition/decartelization.aspx   (171 words)

  
  Encyclopedia: Potsdam Conference   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-02)
Statement of aims of the occupation of Germany by the Allies : demilitarisation, denazification, democratization and decartelization.
Democratization is the transition from authoritarian or semi-authoritarian systems to democratic political systems, where democratic systems are taken to be those approximating to universal suffrage, regular elections, a civil society, the rule of law, and an independent judiciary.
The Potsdam Agreement was an agreement on policy for the occupation and reconstruction of Germany and other nations after fighting in the European Theatre of World War II had ended with the German surrender of May 8, 1945.
www.nationmaster.com /encyclopedia/Potsdam-Conference   (2697 words)

  
 Decartelization - Education - Information - Educational Resources - Encyclopedia - Music
Decartelization is the transition of a national economy from monopoly control by groups of large businesses, known as cartels, to a free market economy.
This change rarely arises naturally, and is generally the result of regulation by a governing body.
A modern example of decartelization is the economic restructuring of Germany after the fall of the Third Reich in 1945.
www.music.us /education/D/Decartelization.htm   (276 words)

  
 America's Bleeding 'Cakewalk'
It is strange that the liberal/radical left did not realize that the oil crisis of 1973-74 was essentially more about the decartelization and globalization of (crude) oil than the "ascendancy" of OPEC.
First, I argue that "No Blood for Oil" is a misleading slogan that contradicts the globalization of oil and mischaracterizes the motivation for war.
More specifically, it ignores the historical periodization of oil into: (1) the early period of cartelization; (2) the transitional period of 1950-72; and (3) the era of decartelization and globalization following the 1973-74 crisis.
www.epsusa.org /publications/newsletter/march2007/bina.htm   (1661 words)

  
 Amazon.com: Antitrust and the Formation of the Postwar World (Columbia Studies in Contemporary American History): ...   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-02)
Wells (history, Auburn Univ.) provides a timely, well-written history that focuses on the people, organizations, and events that in 1938 led a group of zealots in the Antitrust Division of the United States Justice Department to attempt to impose their ideal of antitrust on the rest of the world.
The author includes an insightful description of decartelization and deconcentration efforts in Germany and Japan following World War II and explains why they were so successful in Germany but not in Japan.
He also explains the root causes of the growth of international cartels between World War I and World War II and why the cartel structure was never as important to businesses in the United States.
www.amazon.com /Antitrust-Formation-Columbia-Contemporary-American/dp/0231123981   (664 words)

  
 Conspiracy of Commodities
It was, in short, the prototype for the multinational corporations we now associate with late capitalism.
In fact, it was American corporations who mounted the strongest opposition to "German" decartelization after the war(Moore 144).
As Khachig Tololyan puts it, "[The Rocket] is both a product and a symbol of the kind of activity that Western technological society [as a whole] idealizes"(52).
www.rhizomes.net /issue5/clinton.html   (5865 words)

  
 Decartelization - Our Last Chance (The Nation, February 11, 1950)
Decartelization - Our Last Chance (The Nation, February 11, 1950)
Europe's industrial recovery, which has been hampered from the beginning by customs barriers, import quotas, two-price systems, exchange controls and the like, is now facing what may be the worst difficulty of all private international agreements for the control of prices, production and markets.
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www.thenation.com /archive/detail/13368696   (166 words)

  
 Public Health Expert Says Solving The Anthrax Mailing Mystery May Be Easy: FBI Doesn't Seem Interested
Bayer and Hoechst were formed following World War II from the "decartelization" of Germany's leading industrial organization and Nazi economic engine-I.G. Farben.
Soon after the CIA formed, Bayer and Hoechst were reorganized in 1951 under the direction of the Allied High Commission, largely influenced by U.S. High Commissioner John J. McCloy-a lawyer and banker from Philadelphia, with intimate ties to Rockefeller banking and oil interests.
After "decartelization," the I.G. Farben plants, including all the labor camps involved in the mostly Jewish genocide, were consolidated into three main holding companies: Bayer, Hoechst, and BASF for the benefit of all the stockholders.
www.tetrahedron.org /news/NR011112.html   (1347 words)

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