棉花的复兴:市场创新研究

Cotton's Renaissance: A Study in Market Innovation. By Timothy Curtis Jacobson and George David Smith. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2001. Pp. xvi, 346. $29.95.

Journal of Economic History · 2002
被引 0
人大 A-ABS 3

中文导读

本书研究美国棉花产业如何从供应管理转向需求管理,通过协调生产阶段实现市场复兴,对经济史和产业组织研究者有参考价值。

Abstract

Cotton holds much meaning for economic historians; it brings to mind the industrial revolutions of Europe and Japan, as well as the economic and social fabric of the American South both before and after the Civil War. Yet nothing so weighty as social transformation is entertained in this book; instead the authors chronicle the transformation of cotton from crop to “brand”—with its own logo—as cotton's share of the raw-fiber market recovered from a long decline. Timothy Curtis Jacobson and George David Smith's work is a study of how organizations moved the U.S. cotton industry from supply to demand management and coordinated the stages of production in a setting in which incentives did not favor vertical integration. That story in itself has interest as a case study in marketing and industrial organization. Its hero is “Cotton Incorporated,” formed in 1971 to promote marketing, support research and development, provide technical support for fiber users worldwide, and organize elements in a coherent fashion.

棉花品牌化棉花公司市场创新产业组织