Book Review: What America's Banana King Teaches Us About Capitalism

Book Review: What America’s Banana King Teaches Us About Capitalism

Americans puzzling over the role of today’s powerful corporations — Bain Capital, Goldman Sachs, Google — may profit from considering the example of the United Fruit Company.

It seems almost quaint to think that a company specializing in bananas might have once been considered a capitalist giant on the level of today’s firms, but so it was — at its height in the first half of the last century, United Fruit owned one of the largest private navies in the world. It owned 50 percent of the private land in Honduras and 70 percent of all private land and every mile of railroad in Guatemala.

Citi’s CEO Pay Revolt: Capitalism Is Back, Baby!

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One of the more gratifying moments so far this year – at least in the realm of high finance – was the decision last week by shareholders of Citigroup to reject a $15 million pay package for CEO Vikram Pandit. The shareholders vetoed the award since they believed there was too big a disconnect between [...]

7 Ways of Seeing Goldman Sachs

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Is the kind of behavior Greg Smith describes in his New York Times Op-Ed an example of brass-knuckled American capitalism, or evidence that the financial sector has lost its way?

Couldn’t Make Davos This Year? Here Are the 5 Things Everyone’s Talking About

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The topics and tropes fall faster than snowflakes here in Davos, where several thousand of the world’s leading business people, politicians and policy makers gather once a year for an annual think-fest. And with literally hundreds of panels, debates, interviews, workshops and symposia taking place, it would be impossible to capture all of the ideas competing for attendees’ attention.

How to Save Capitalism

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As the global economic crisis enters its fourth excruciating year, just about everybody who can be blamed for the downturn has been blamed. But with another grim year likely ahead and no ready solutions in sight, yet another target has arisen in the public’s crosshairs: capitalism itself.