
Gilded Greed and Broken Trust: White-Collar Crime History From Railroad Barons to Wall Street Fraud.DE
Synopsis
This book examines how the fortunes of 19th century railroad tycoons concealed practices that eroded public trust, tracing the connection between robber baron era manipulation and later Wall Street fraud. It explores how recurring cycles of financial excess reshaped American capitalism and contributed to lasting skepticism toward concentrated corporate power in both the United States and Europe.Railroad magnates such as Jay Gould and Cornelius Vanderbilt expanded their empires through monopolistic control, stock watering, political bribery, and aggressive tactics designed to crush rivals. Their ability to influence legislators through land grants and favorable regulation established a pattern in which wealth could purchase political protection, laying foundations later mirrored in modern financial lobbying and market deregulation.The work then traces the evolution of fraud from overt industrial coercion to more sophisticated financial deception. Schemes associated with figures such as Charles Ponzi, Michael Milken, and Bernard Ebbers reveal how information asymmetry, speculative optimism, and manipulated accounting practices transformed fraud into a systemic financial tool operating beneath a veneer of legitimacy.Public backlash against these abuses eventually produced major regulatory reforms, including the Sherman Antitrust Act, the creation of the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission, and later transparency measures such as the Sarbanes-Oxley Act. Together, these cycles illustrate the recurring tension between entrepreneurial ambition and the temptation to exploit public trust.
Publisher information
- Publisher: epubli
- ISBN: 9783565451418
- Dimensions: 12 x 210 x 297 mm
- Weight: 519g
- Languages: English