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  • - [Instructor] The period from the end of the Civil War

  • to the start of the 20th Century was one of

  • incredible economic transformation in the United States.

  • In 1865 the United States was the 4th largest

  • industrial economy in the world.

  • By the 1890s, it had leapt to 1st place.

  • At the same time, where people worked, how people worked,

  • and how much money they made, all changed drastically.

  • During the Gilded Age, the United States went from

  • being a nation of farmers to a nation of factory workers.

  • The nature of work itself also changed

  • as large corporations began to implement

  • management techniques aimed at

  • increasing efficiency and profit.

  • The gap between rich and poor also increased

  • considerably during this era.

  • So what caused this economic transformation?

  • In this video I want to explore some of the factors

  • that contributed to these changes in work and the economy:

  • technological advancements, new business strategies,

  • business consolidation, and pro-growth government policies.

  • So let's dive a little deeper into each of these.

  • One of the biggest factors contributing to the rise

  • of industrial capitalism was technology.

  • The late 19th Century was an era of innovation.

  • Nearly half a million patents were issued

  • between 1860 and 1900.

  • Improvements in machinery and manufacturing processes,

  • like the Bessemer process to make steel,

  • increased productivity.

  • And there were new technologies that helped business:

  • the telephone to coordinate transactions over

  • long distances, the typewriter to speed up record keeping,

  • and electricity which made it possible

  • to work safely after dark.

  • And the expansion of the railroad, made it easy

  • to get raw materials to factories

  • and finished goods to markets.

  • Corporations also devised new strategies

  • to cope with doing business at a national scale.

  • In this era the first national brands emerged.

  • Companies like Coca-Cola and Kellogg's Corn Flakes

  • began advertising to national audiences.

  • And mail order catalogs like Montgomery Ward and Sears

  • sold products across the country.

  • An integrated nation-wide system of business and shipping

  • made it easy for customers and companies to connect.

  • During the Gilded Age coordinating supplies and workers,

  • time tables and sales, became its own

  • full time job called management.

  • Managers worked to increase efficiency and cut costs.

  • They did this in a number of ways:

  • by replacing workers with machines,

  • increasing working hours, and decreasing wages for laborers.

  • The titans of industry used other measures

  • to maximize profits as well.

  • The Gilded Age was an era of ruthless business competition

  • and the magnates of each industry set out

  • to crush their enemies.

  • Many of the men who made fabulous fortunes

  • during the Gilded Age, started out in the railroad industry

  • taking advantage of government subsidies and land grants.

  • The U.S. Government took a laissez faire,

  • or hands off, approach to regulating business at this time.

  • And there were no corporate or income taxes

  • so it was possible for a few individuals and companies

  • to amass enormous wealth.

  • They did so by consolidating their businesses,

  • reducing competition, and controlling markets.

  • Steel baron Andrew Carnegie was one of the first

  • businessmen to employ vertical integration in his companies.

  • The goal of vertical integration is to control

  • every part of the supply chain for a product.

  • For example, Carnegie owned not just steel mills,

  • but the mines that produced the iron ore and coal

  • necessary for making steel,

  • and the ships and railroads that transported

  • raw materials to the factories,

  • and finished steel from the factories.

  • This cut out middlemen and ensured that

  • Carnegie never had to wait for other companies

  • to send him supplies.

  • Big businesses in the Gilded Age also reduced

  • competition through holding companies, trusts, and pools.

  • Holding companies and trusts allowed mergers

  • that put many companies under the control

  • of one parent company.

  • Using these tactics, John D. Rockefeller

  • who owned Standard Oil, controlled 95%

  • of the country's oil supply by the end of the 19th Century.

  • Standard Oil become the nation's first

  • billion dollar company.

  • Some companies realized that cooperation

  • was better than competition and simply agreed

  • to divide markets and profits between them.

  • These groups of supposedly competing business entities

  • were known as pools.

  • The rise of industrial capitalism had major consequences

  • on American life, politics, and foreign policy.

  • For some, this new economy meant a higher

  • standard of living than ever before,

  • with cheap and plentiful material comforts.

  • But this new way of doing business came at the expense

  • of wages and working conditions,

  • leading workers to begin organizing unions

  • and advocating for political solutions to economic problems.

  • And as the United States produced more and more,

  • it would begin looking abroad for new markets

  • to sell its goods and consequently,

  • for greater influence in the world.

- [Instructor] The period from the end of the Civil War

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