Hampden-Turner, Charles.

The seven cultures of capitalism : value systems for creating wealth in the United States, Japan, Germany, France, Britain, Sweden, and the Netherlands / 7 cultures of capitalism Charles Hampden-Turner, Alfons Trompenaars. - First edition. - ix, 405 pages : illustrations ; 25 cm

"A Currency book.".

Includes bibliographical references (pages 375-405).

Acknowledgments -- A Note on Methodology -- Seven Ways of Wealth Creation -- Codifiers-in-Chief, Analyzers Extraordinary -- The Triumphant Individual Within -- When You're Racing with the Clock -- Level Playing Fields -- Harmonious Patterns of Particulars -- On Synchrony, Hierarchy, and Time -- The Logics of Community -- Will the German Model of Capitalism Sweep Europe? -- Sweden's Social Individualism: Between Raging Horses -- Self-Constructed Lands: The Dutch as God's Apprentices -- Britannia Rules the Airwaves -- Crisis and Contradiction: Exceptional France -- Afterword -- Bibliography -- Notes. 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13.

"In this bias-breaking study, Charles Hampden-Turner and Alfons Trompenaars have discovered that the values, habits, and cultural styles ordinarily associated with social development or the arts turn out to be the key ingredients of economic success." "Each of the seven cultures of capitalism - the United States, Britain, France, Germany, Japan, Sweden, and the Netherlands - has unique cultural habits and traditions of economic excellence. The way we structure time, or behave as we climb the career ladder, or the loyalty we believe we owe our employer and our employees, even our self-images - all these powerfully and often unconsciously influence our every business decision." "To understand these habits is to help us gain control over our business behavior. In the same way, we can also learn, and adopt, the strategies and thought processes behind the world's most successful economic practices. Just as a smart automobile manufactured might get its steel from Korea, its engines from Germany, its electronics from Japan, its leather and mahogany from Britain, and its safety systems from Sweden, so a smart capitalist can learn new ways of building wealth from understanding how the Japanese plan ventures that maximize their returns in knowledge as well as profit; how the Germans have created the world's best trained work force and uphold the world's highest environmental standards; and how the Swedish, with their national devotion to adapting work to people, not vice versa, have achieved the world's lowest unemployment rate." "In a world where more and more products and services are created by cross-teams, joint ventures, partnerships, through foreign subsidiaries, the competitive edge goes to those who can turn cultural differences into economic advantages."--BOOK JACKET.

038542101X 9780385421010 0749913304 9780749913304

93025799


Capitalism--Cross-cultural studies
Wealth--Cross-cultural studies

HB501 / .H333 1993

330.122