The Predatory Society : Deception in the American Marketplace.


Paul. Blumberg
Bok Engelsk 1990 · Electronic books.
Omfang
1 online resource (271 pages)
Opplysninger
Intro -- Contents -- Introduction: The Paradox of Capitalism -- 1 A Bit of Bolshevik Sociology: Workers Write About Their Jobs -- 2 Selling It: The Seamy Side of the Marketplace -- 3 Ignorance: Dumb Customers and Distracted Customers -- 4 Ignorance in the "Knowledge" Society: The Technically Uninformed Customer -- 5 Helpless Customers and Potemkin Villages -- 6 Scarcity -- 7 Perishability -- 8 Filth -- 9 Petty Bourgeois Tricks -- 10 Honest Business: Neighborhoods and Saints -- 11 Morality and the Marketplace -- Appendix: Business Ethics and Research Ethics -- Notes -- Index -- A -- B -- C -- D -- E -- F -- G -- H -- I -- J -- K -- L -- M -- N -- O -- P -- Q -- R -- S -- T -- U -- V -- W -- Y.. - How pervasive is deception in the American marketplace? In this pioneering study, Paul Blumberg not only reveals the extent to which fraud is practiced on the American consumer, but offers a penetrating analysis of its causes and social consequences. Among the evidence Blumberg examines are 600 accounts by workers in such businesses as restaurants, gas stations, and drug stores of the fraudulent practices of their employers. Here are eye-opening accounts of gas station owners selling regular gas as high test, auto mechanics who spray-paint old parts and sell them as new, pharmacists who sell generic drugs at brand-name prices, and more. Blumberg suggests that dishonesty is all but built into the American marketplace, and that its social effects include the loss of trust and community.
Emner
Sjanger
Dewey
ISBN
9780198020806
ISBN(galt)

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