Condensed capitalism

Campbell Soup and the pursuit of cheap production in the twentieth century

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Daniel Sidorick: Condensed capitalism (EBook, 2009, ILR Press/Cornell University Press)

1 online resource (311 pages) : illustrations, 311 pages

English language

Published 2009 by ILR Press/Cornell University Press.

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Corporations often move factories to areas where production costs, notably labor, taxes, and regulations, are sharply lower than in the original company hometowns. Not every company, however, followed this trend. One of America's most iconic firms, the Campbell Soup Company, was one such exception: it found ways to achieve low-cost production while staying in its original location, Camden, New Jersey, until 1990. The first in-depth history of the Campbell Soup Company and its workers, Condensed Capitalism is also a broader exploration of strategies that companies have used to keep costs down besides relocating to cheap labor havens: lean production, flexible labor sourcing, and uncompromising antiunionism. Daniel Sidorick's study of a classic firm that used these methods for over a century has, therefore, special relevance in current debates about capital mobility and the shifting powers of capital and labor. Sidorick focuses on the engine of the Campbell empire: the soup plants …

1 edition

Subjects

  • Soup industry New Jersey Camden History.
  • Soup industry Employees Labor unions New Jersey Camden History.
  • Industrial relations New Jersey Camden History.
  • Production management New Jersey Camden History.
  • Campbell Soup Company History.