Types of production and their characteristics: corporations in the modern economy
The main characteristics of a market economyare a corporate type of management, enterprises and institutions based on a joint-stock ownership form. They are considered not only as types of production and their characteristics, formation and activity of corporations is considered as a characteristic of the degree of the entire civilizational development of the country, as a strategy of its inclusion in the world economy.
Considering the main types of production, it is importantTo note that the main thing is not in the category "corporation" itself, but in what types and methods of organizing production and all activities constitute their content.
The main distinctive feature of the corporation is the association of persons, economic entities, for conducting joint business activities in any sphere of the economy.
P. Drucker, back in 1946, in a well-known work "Principles of the Corporation," wrote that the corporation is called upon to answer who and how in the world can ensure the most effective economic development. A large corporation is not even so much an economic institution as a socio-political institution. This determines its internal types of production and their characteristics.
Corporations play an ambiguous role in the development ofcompetition. There is a misconception about the constant development of competition in the current economy. In fact, there are two tendencies: one aimed at fading competition, the most important feature of which is the reduction in the number of its subjects and scale, and the other is related to increased competition between states and TNCs, while maintaining some traditional territorial competitive relations, including small and medium-sized businesses .
It is obvious that the main reason for the distributioncapital are the types of production and their characteristics, and as a result, the increase in the power of the corporation is the advantage of large-scale production in the form of economies of scale. The essence of the latter is that as the size of enterprises grows, the tendency to reduce costs begins to act.
One form of corporate structure isoligopoly, the attitude to which from the side of society is ambiguous, as well as to monopoly in general. The difference between an oligopoly and a pure monopoly is that there is an external demonstration of competition. So, the types of production and their characteristics from the position of society are formed in such a way that the oligopoly is more desirable than the monopoly. At one time, J. Schumpeter and J. Hepbreith believed that large oppongopolistic companies are necessary for the rapid growth of NTP. The development of new products and technologies is very expensive, and only opogopopisticheskie firms are able to finance it. Barriers to entry into the industry for competitors guarantee the oligopolist confidence in making profits, some of which can be channeled to R & D. According to scientists, the oligopoly helps to improve quality, reduce production costs and prices, and can also contribute to an increase in output and employment compared to a sector organized on a competitive basis.
Concentration of production (and therefore,monopolization of the economy) not only contributes to the extinction of competition due to the reduction of competitors, but also contributes to the NTP, i.e. appears in a role that is usually attributed to competition. As a result, in the second half of the last century, the formation and development of transnational corporations replaced the strengthening of monopolization and integration. It should be considered that this process is still only in its initial phase, as now in the world there is a rapid rethinking of the system of building the world economy and its forms.