A surprising look at the big business of owning small businesses and
what America’s franchise economy means for its workers. Walk into a
McDonald’s anywhere in the United States, and it will be identical
to every other McDonald’s in the country. Yet, that particular store
is almost certainly owned and operated by an “independent”
franchisee. While McDonald’s presents an image of centralized
uniformity to the consumer, it shows a different face to the small
business owners operating its stores under its control and the workers
preparing its product to its standards. How then does
McDonald’s—and its big business peers—manage to be two things at
once? In this revelatory work, economist Brian Callaci shows how
franchisors have altered the legal treatment of corporations in their
favor through a decades-long crusade of lobbying and litigation. Their
efforts subsequently unleashed a slew of legal and economic sins upon
the US economy and labor force, allowing multinational corporations to
control continent-spanning empires while outsourcing employment and
scapegoating legal responsibilities onto small businesses. The result:
the unfettered growth of some of America’s most recognizable
businesses, at the aggregate expense of America’s workers.
Remarkable in both its scale and synthesis, Callaci’s story is the
first chronicle of this business movement—initially resisted by US
courts before experiencing a dramatic reversal of fortune after
decades of campaigning by some of America’s most established
entrepreneurs. An urgent and erudite history, Chains of Command
reveals how the US labor market was tamed one small business at a
time.
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The Rise and Cruel Reign of the Franchise Economy
Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9780226848426
Publisert
2026
Utgiver
University of Chicago Press
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Forfatter