Research into interlocking directorates and other organizational ties
between large corporations dates back to the beginning of the century.
In Germany and the United States interlocking directorates became an
important means of coordination and control of large corporations and
banks at the end of the nineteenth century and were, as a result,
particularly subject to scientific investigation and public debate.
Trusts were regarded with mistrust, especially in the United States,
where John Moody's study from 1904 was significantly entitled The Truth
about Trusts. In Germany much attention was paid to the role-or-the
large Berlin banks in the economic development. The first large study in
Germany carried the prolix title The Relationship between the Large
German Banks and Industry with Special Reference to the Iron Industry
(Jeidels, 1905). ---- --------- The studies in the United States were
predominantly induced and even carried out by committees of the Federal
Congress. In Europe, on the other hand, the labor movement soon became
interested in the patterns of interlocking directorates. In the
Netherlands, for example, Wibaut, a socialist leader, carried out a
study on interlocking directorates, copying the research design of
Jeidels. Accordingly, two different schools can be distinguished from
the start: the Marxian school which developed the concept of finance
capital to explain the existing interlocking directorates, and the
institutional economists who used the concept of economic power to
explain the same phenomenon.