The Box: How the Shipping Container Made the World Smaller and the World Economy Bigger by Marc Levinson

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Textbook (Hardcover)

  • 400pp

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Detailed Rating: "Comprehensive" See All

TEXTBOOK INFORMATION

  • ISBN-13: 9780691123240
  • Edition Number: 1
  • Pub. Date: March 2006
  • Publisher: Princeton University Press
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Product Details

  • Pub. Date: March 2006
  • Publisher: Princeton University Press
  • Format: Textbook Hardcover, 400pp

Synopsis

"The continuous decline of ocean shipping costs in the last 40 years is rarely credited for the growth of global trade in contemporary literature. Don't miss this amazing history."--George Stalk, Boston Consulting Group and author of Surviving the China Riptide"An excellent piece of work."--Bruce Nelson, Dartmouth College"This book is dynamite. The experts who tell you the transistor and microchips changed the world are off base. The ugly, unglamorous, little-noticed shipping container has changed the world. Without it, there would be no globalization, no Wal-Mart, maybe even no high-tech. And what looks like low-tech is in fact a breathtaking technological innovation. Marc Levinson's sparkling and authoritative story is great fun to read, but it is spectacular economic history as well."--Peter L. Bernstein, author of Against the Gods: The Remarkable Story of Risk"Fascinating, informative, wonderfully historicized. This is a terrific untold story."--Nelson Lichtenstein, University of California, Santa Barbara, and editor of Wal-Mart: the Face of Twenty-First Century Capitalism"The adoption of the modern shipping container may be a close second to the Internet in the way it has changed our lives. It has made products from every corner of the world commonplace and accessible everywhere. It has dramatically cut the cost of transportation and thereby made outsourcing a significant issue. It has transformed the world's port cities, and more. This book, very nicely written, makes a fascinating set of true stories of an apparently mundane subject, and dramatically illustrates how simple innovations can transform our lives."--William Baumol, Director, Berkley Center for EntrepreneurialStudies, author of The Free-Market Innovation Machine

Library Journal

Economist Levinson (The Economist Guide to Financial Markets) shows in this history of the shipping container how its invention helped form our modern global economy by bringing down the cost of transporting goods. He explains how the advent of the shipping container in the mid-1950s-the book is published on the 50th anniversary of the first container voyage-was a radical break from the labor-intensive loading and transport of loose cargo by trucks, railroads, and break-bulk ships. Levinson demonstrates how, despite strong opposition from longshoremen, transportation companies, and government regulators, the economic advantages of containerization won out in the end and how, as a result, the shipping industry, port cities, and whole national economies have been transformed. Levinson presents a clear, comprehensive history of the now-ubiquitous shipping container while highlighting its crucial economic role in global interconnectivity. Highly recommended for transportation and economics collections in academic and larger public libraries.-Lawrence R. Maxted, Gannon Univ., Erie, PA. Copyright 2006 Reed Business Information.

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Biography

Marc Levinson is an economist in New York and author of three previous books. He was formerly finance and economics editor of the "Economist", a writer at "Newsweek", and editorial director of the "Journal of Commerce".

Customer Reviews

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An Outstandingly Good Business Historyby Anonymous

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October 10, 2009: The Box is an outstandingly good business history of the people, organizations, and political and economic interests that since the early 1950s have brought about an ongoing revolution in the ocean transportation of general cargo.

I Also Recommend: Maritime Economics 3e.

Information-packed history of container shippingby Anonymous

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May 16, 2006: Happy fiftieth birthday to the shipping container, that unexciting, unglamorous cog in the wheels of commerce that just so happened to change the world. Most people might have ignored the import of the box during the past half-century, but economist Marc Levinson offers an insightful tale that will help you appreciate this oft-overlooked advancement. If it weren?t for the container, Levinson argues persuasively, for good or ill, there could be no Wal-Mart and U.S. manufacturing jobs couldn?t have migrated to China. This history lesson recounts the box inventor?s quest and offers some subtle perspective for businesspeople struggling to foretell the future. At times, Levinson bogs down in the details of 1950s labor relations, but his work mostly moves quickly through the highs and lows of the container?s story. We recommend this revealing tale to anyone in the global economy.