Abstract

Abstract Few people appreciate the extent to which large multinational business enterprises are able to shape our lives. The products and services that we use in the course of our routine daily activities-the food that we eat, the newspapers that we read, the cars that we drive, the houses that we live in, and so on-are all today the products of mass-market business enterprises. These commodities can be produced for us only if other enterprises produce the boilers, printing presses, machine tools, and bricks that are required in their production. The majority of people in paid employment are paid by these same businesses to work in the factories, shops, and offices that produce these goods, and the production and consumption of goods requires the use of cash, credit cards, and bank accounts that are operated by large banking enterprises.

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