can be judged to lack monopolistic power even if it controls more than 30 percent of its market provided other
companies have comparable market shares. While antitrust laws may have increased competition, they have not kept
U.S. companies from getting bigger. Seven corporate giants had assets of more than $300,000 million each in 1999,
dwarfing the largest corporations of earlier periods. Some critics have voiced concern about the growing control of
basic industries by a few large firms, asserting that industries such as automobile manufacture and steel
production have been seen as oligopolies dominated by a few major corporations. Others note, however, that many of
these large corporations cannot exercise undue power despite their size because they face formidable global
competition. If consumers are unhappy with domestic auto-makers, for instance, they can buy cars from foreign
companies. In addition, consumers or manufacturers sometimes can thwart would-be monopolies by switching to
substitute products; for example, aluminum, glass, plastics, or concrete all can substitute for steel. Attitudes
among business leaders concerning corporate bigness have varied. In the late 1960s and early 1970s, many ambitious
companies sought to diversify by acquiring unrelated businesses, at least partly because strict federal antitrust
enforcement tended to block mergers within the same field. As business leaders saw it, conglomerates -- a type of
business organization usually consisting of a holding company and a group of subsidiary firms engaged in dissimilar
activities, such as oil drilling and movie-making -- are inherently more stable. If demand for one product
slackens, the theory goes, another line of business can provide balance. But this advantage sometimes is offset by
the difficulty of managing diverse activities rather than specializing in the production of narrowly defined
product lines. Many business leaders who engineered the mergers of the 1960s and 1970s, found themselves
overextended or unable to manage all of their newly acquired subsidiaries. In many cases, they divested the weaker
acquisitions. The 1980s and 1990s brought new waves of friendly mergers and "hostile" 51
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