This book is about the way in which industrial production in
Germany is conditioned by social and political factors. Herrigel
emphasizes regional, organizational, and policy dimensions of the
development of German industry from the seventeenth century to the
present. The argument is distinctive because it pays so much
attention to small and medium-sized firms, and because it suggests
that Germany does not have a single coherent national system of
industrial governance. This social constructivist point of view
presents a direct challenge to the Gerschenkronian, Schumpetarian,
and Chandlerian approaches to Germany's economic history.
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