The Theory of Business Enterprise
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A critique of capitalism from the right, arguing that modern industry and modern business interests are not only distinct but in conflict, destined to undermine each other.
Description
Thorstein Veblen’s The Theory of Business Enterprise is not a traditionalist book, but beneath it lies a deeper current of reaction against the present capitalist order.
His core conceptual innovation is to distinguish industry—the machine process—from business—ownership for profit. The tension between these two produces not the spontaneous order imagined by liberal economists, but a system in which industry is obstructed and financially manipulated for commercial advantage. Out of this distinction between business and industry grows a two-pronged reactionary critique.
On the one hand, industry undermines tradition by habituating us to thinking in impersonal and abstract terms. And yet, this mechanical worldview undermines ideas of “natural liberty,” “free contract,” and property rights—precisely the values upon which capitalism depends. The society organised around machine labour produces men who cease to believe in the moral sanctity of property and contract.
On the other hand, Veblen reveals the businessman to be a parasite—the strategic manipulator of ownership rather than the creator of useful goods. This punctures the bourgeois cult of the entrepreneur: the true value of the “captain of industry” is that he eliminates other businessmen who profit from disruption and rent-seeking rather than from producing value.
In the end, Veblen sees militarised national politics as a real counter-force to the disintegrating effects of industrial capitalism and business liberalism. He suggests that war, patriotism, and state discipline can revive older habits of loyalty and caste. Business interests may ironically help call this militarism into being, only for it to take on a life of its own and subordinate business to dynastic and state ends.
Veblen offers no restoration. But as an anatomy of bourgeois modernity’s self-dissolving logic, his book is unusually powerful, and still relevant.
Additional Information
| Publication Date | May 13, 2026 |
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| Weight | 0.4 kg |
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| Author(s) | Thorstein Veblen |
| Language | English |
| Pages | 290 |
| ISBN | 978-1-923478-90-9 |
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