No indeed. But it's harder to buy out, and gives it more leverage to grow and make its own international acquisitions.I mean, because it's a private company, concentrating power doesn't actually prevent it from being snapped up by foreign entities. It's got stock
A monopoly is one entity controlling one good.Why not?
This is generally not more efficient which is why most companies don't do. However it does produce a certain amount of security/stability for a price. Which is why some companies do.From an efficiency standpoint, it is better if Amazon buys up the entire supply chain and administers the whole thing as part of a single bureaucratic structure than leaving it to the "free market". That is why they do it.
I have lived in it.Even assuming this is true, which I think is incredibly debatable. That wasn't the example, and there are good reasons why it wasn't the example. There are very clear and obvious reasons why most most member republics of the USSR suffered during the Soviet period, because they were being deliberately exploited by the more wealthy republics (Russia and to a lesser extent Ukraine).
I don't care how often you call it magic. It works better.The point is that free markets are not magic. Stuff in a free market doesn't just happen and sort itself out magically with no human involvement. Everything still has to be planned and organized. Russia's "free market" economy is an excellent example of how the supposedly inherent problems of centrally planned economies can just as easily persist or even worsen in free market economies, because at the end of the day they still rely on the exact same degree of human involvement and the exact same capacity for human error and abuse.
Nope. Don't see it.Okay, but you see the double standard, right?
Yes. It may be worth pointing out, though, that :The main problem with competitive capitalism is that it leads to overproduction and overconsumption, and that's not sustainable given a biosphere with physical limitations.
Well, it's a good thing we don't have a test case for whether this argument actually holds water, otherwise you'd look like a right ass debating the point.This is generally not more efficient which is why most companies don't do. However it does produce a certain amount of security/stability for a price. Which is why some companies do.
But the main benefit of owing the whole supply chain is that suppliers can't prioritise other, better opportunities. In a planned economy all those competing opportunities are controlled by the same entity and it will always eat supply deficit.
Clearly Sears just needed, in contrast to every other example of a capitalist firm, break itself apart even further. They didn't harness enough of the superior allocative efficiency of the Free™ Market.If you're correct, Sears should be the more successful corporation, compared to Amazon. Let's compare their market caps, shall we?
Do the market cap spikes in your examples even correlate with the changed strategies ? Looking at your picture Sears (of which i never heard) had its heyday around 2006 but you claim the divestment strategy started in the 90s. Wouldn't that mean it worked ? Amazon has a huge peak in 2020/22 and is starting to go down now. Is this related to any chance in integration strategy or manybe completely due to other effects like the epidemic ? And Walmart... did Walmart actually change anything relevant to this in the last two decades ?So, Sears used to be Amazon, a century before Amazon. Except, Sears at its heyday was what Bezos wishes Amazon were today. Extremely integrated vertically and horizontally, every operational aspect planned with in-house branding and support services, up to and including real estate and prefab housing kits (yes, that part of RDR2 was based on real history); hell, Sears & Roebuck owned and operated its own bank and credit (not many people remember Discover was originally a Sears holding).
Are there actually such examples? Or is what is being described in the vague way of "broke under their own weight" actually another, more specific problem in each case?There are more than enough examples that broke under their own weight when expanding into new buissness areas or takeovers didn't pan out.
Daimler Cryster. Microsoft Nokia. GM and its long and sorry failed merger history. Karstadt Quelle Kaufhof (also outdated buiness model). Zeiss Kombinat.Are there actually such examples?
Daimler Cryster. Microsoft Nokia. GM and its long and sorry failed merger history. Karstadt Quelle Kaufhof (also outdated buiness model). Zeiss Kombinat.
It is no easy, i don't even need a lot of time to come up with some.
Or is what is being described in the vague way of "broke under their own weight" actually another, more specific problem in each case?
Well that is a technical error on Eacaraxe's part.Do the market cap spikes in your examples even correlate with the changed strategies ? Looking at your picture Sears (of which i never heard) had its heyday around 2006 but you claim the divestment strategy started in the 90s.
Shame!snip
I think I first heard of Sears because its where Brenda and Eddie get their paintings from in Billy Joel's Scenes from an Italian Restaurant.I always assumed Sears (my familiarity only through reading Stephen King) was basically an American John Lewis.
In quality at least, I think it would probably be more accurate to describe it as the American Debenhams. Although contemporary British department stores tended to be clothes and home only, where Sears sold a great deal more.I always assumed Sears (my familiarity only through reading Stephen King) was basically an American John Lewis.
My brand awareness isn't sufficiently good to know whether Debenhams is better or worse than John Lewis.In quality at least, I think it would probably be more accurate to describe it as the American Debenhams. Although contemporary British department stores tended to be clothes and home only, where Sears sold a great deal more.
But companies that fail to adapt and move with the times die. Debenhams, of course, has also gone.
Debenhams was very mid-range - same sort of territory as Next. M&S and John Lewis are upper-middle. I would define high end as places like Selfridges and House of Fraser, then beyond that into the luxury stores like Harrod's and Liberty's. At the lower end, places like BHS (defunct) and TK Maxx.My brand awareness isn't sufficiently good to know whether Debenhams is better or worse than John Lewis.
Ugh, I tried to buy a suit in M&S the other day; like a who's who of being 400 years old and incredibly slow walkers, and their suit range is shit. I bought one from Next in the end (there were too many people in Moss Bros and not enough pounds in my wallet). I splurged (financially) on a waistcoat too.Debenhams was very mid-range - same sort of territory as Next. M&S and John Lewis are upper-middle. I would define high end as places like Selfridges and House of Fraser, then beyond that into the luxury stores like Harrod's and Liberty's. At the lower end, places like BHS (defunct) and TK Maxx.
I liked Debenhams, you could pick up decent stuff at a reasonable price. Didn't have the dull / middle age / preppy vibes much of M&S and JL's stuff did, and avoided the low build quality in a lot of the cheaper. I ended up hating everything I ever bought from Next so stopped a long time ago (unless it's something that can't got wrong, like a belt).
I prefer physical sales, so you can properly see the clothes and try them on. I find online buying frustrating. My wife has switched to it - she buys lots of stuff in different sizes, and ends up sending about 90% back, but it seems like a lot of faff to me.