Much has been written recently about the decline of US industrial competitiveness in world markets.' In fact, two members of President Clinton's economic policy team, Laura Tyson and Robert Reich, have written about the need to improve American productivity, focusing on high-tech R& D and worker skill upgrading. A major focus of both popular and professional writings on the problems of American business has been the alleged short-term orientation of American firms relative to European and, especially, Japanese companies. The first Annual Report to the President and Congress by the Competitiveness Policy Council (Chaired by economist C. Fred Bergsten) stated that one of the most important causes of declining competitiveness 'is America's proclivity to think and act with a short-term horizon. By contrast, our competitors around the world plan and execute their actions against far more extended time horizons.'2 This 'corporate myopia'-too narrow a focus on short-term profits-has been linked to US tax and antitrust policy, takeover laws, the lack of lifetime tenure at US firms, and a culture of greed. Proposals have been made for government policy to modify this behavior.3 Granting, for our purposes, the existence of this myopia -which can be seen as a higher rate of time preference (or subjective discount rate) by US corporate decision makers relative to those in Europe and Japan-the question we raise in this paper is the following: 'Would there be an unambiguous gain from a move to a longer-term view by US business?' This paper suggests some caution, noting as a point of departure that those countries in which a longer-term business perspective is applauded by US observers tend also to be those in which collusion, tacit or otherwise, has seemed to be an ingrained part of the business culture. Coincidence? A sociological phenomenon? Perhaps, but this paper offers an alternative explanation. The point is that an emphasis on short-run profits by American firms may have contributed to the generally competitive environment of most US industries. While others have expressed concern about the anti-competitive implications of cooperative activities in the RD one could certainly object to the intervention of government into corporate decision making on other grounds as well.