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Narrator

  • Peter Wicks

Runtime

  • 10hr 0m

The Corporation in the Twenty-First Century: Why (almost) everything we are told about business is wrong

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SHORTLISTED FOR THE FINANCIAL TIMES AND SCHRODERS BUSINESS BOOK OF THE YEAR 2024

"Original and thought-provoking... A brilliantly erudite account of the major waves in the theory and practice of management" - The Financial Times

"The doyen of British thinkers on the evolution of business...One of the great attractions of his [work] is that he stands above and apart from conventional political attitudes" - Literary Review

For generations, we have defined a corporation as a business run by a capitalist elite, that uses its accumulated wealth to own the means of production and exercise economic power.

That is no longer the reality. In the twenty-first century, our most desired goods and services aren't stacked in warehouses or on container ships: they appear on your screen, fit in your pocket or occupy your head.

But even as we consume more than ever before, big business faces a crisis of legitimacy. The pharmaceutical industry creates life-saving vaccines but has lost the trust of the public. The widening pay gap between executives and employees is destabilising our societies. Facebook and Google have more customers than any companies in history but are widely reviled.

John Kay, one of the greatest economists of our time, describes how the pursuit of shareholder value has destroyed some of the leading companies of the twentieth century. Incisive and provocative, this book redefines successful commercial activity and leadership, the knowledge economy and what the future of the modern corporation might be.

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Praise for The Corporation in the Twenty-First Century

  • Kay is both a first-class economist and an excellent writer - Financial Times

  • An admirable debunker of myths and false beliefs - Kay can see substantial things others don't' - Nassim N Taleb, author, The Black Swan

  • Mr Kay is a brilliant writer - Wall Street Journal

  • An unparalleled communicator of economics to a non-specialist audience - New Statesman

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John Kay

John Kay

Sir John Kay is one of Britain's leading economists. A Fellow of the British Academy and Royal Society of Edinburgh, he was the founding dean of the Oxford Business School and has held chairs at London Business School and LSE. Other People's Money was shortlisted for the Orwell Prize for Political Writing.

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