Other People's Money And How the Bankers Use It

Other People's Money And How the Bankers Use It

Other People's Money And How the Bankers Use It (1914) is a collection of essays written by Louis Brandeis first published as a book in 1914, and reissued in 1933.

Contents

Contents

All the chapters of the book appeared as articles between 22 November 1913 and 17 January 1914, and were written before November 1913.

  1. Our Financial Oligarchy
  2. How the Combiners Combine
  3. Interlocking Directorates
  4. Serve One Master Only!
  5. What Publicity Can Do
  6. Where the Banker is Superfluous
  7. Big Men and Little Business
  8. A Curse of Bigness
  9. The Failure of Banker-Management (first appeared in Harper's Weekly, 16 August 1913)
  10. The Inefficiency of the Oligarchs

Synopsis

The book attacked the use of investment funds to promote the consolidation of various industries under the control of a small number of corporations, which Brandeis alleged were working in concert to prevent competition. Brandeis harshly criticized investment bankers who controlled large amounts of money deposited in their banks by middle-class people. The heads of these banks, Brandeis pointed out, routinely sat on the boards of railroad companies and large industrial manufacturers of various products, and routinely directed the resources of their banks to promote the interests of their own companies. These companies, in turn, sought to maintain control of their industries by crushing small businesses and stamping out innovators who developed better products to compete against them.

Brandeis supported his contentions with a discussion of the actual dollar amounts—in millions of dollars—controlled by specific banks, industries, and industrialists such as J. P. Morgan, noting that these interests had recently acquired a far larger proportion of American wealth than corporate entities had ever had before. He extensively cited testimony from a Congressional investigation performed by the Pujo Committee, named after Louisiana Representative Arsène Pujo, into self-serving and monopolistic business dealing.

Significance

The book received great publicity at the time,[citation needed] and was widely lauded by legal academics.[citation needed] Attention to the book was amplified by Brandeis' nomination to the Supreme Court of the United States in 1916.

See also

  • US corporate law

Notes

External links