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Articles

Families and firms: The culture and evolution of family firms in britain and italy in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries

Pages 24-47 | Published online: 20 Dec 2011
 

Abstract

Family firms played a very similar role in the industrialisation of both Britain and Italy in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries. In both countries the relatively-low transaction costs of family and community in an uncertain world meant that family capitalism predominated, whilst trends in the late nineteenth century and inter-war period have reinforced this trend. Yet, even in this latter period, international differences dictated by differences in the institutional environment and in the relationship between industry and the state have led to differing characteristics of family firms and their capabilities in Britain and Italy. The article explores how far these long-term trends, combined with changes specific to the period since the Second World War, explain the survival of dominant large-scale family firms in Italy but not in Britain.

Additional information

Notes on contributors

Mary B. Rose

This article is the result of collaborative research into the history of family business in Italy and Britain. Mary R Rose carried out the research on Britain and Andrea Colli on Italy. All comparative parts, and the introduction and conclusion, represent joint work.

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