Published online by Cambridge University Press: 30 January 2018
The article analyzes a list of the hundred largest private and state-owned employers in the Russian Empire in 1913. It explains the validity of sources underlying the data and contributes to the methodological debates concerning the interpretation of such lists. It examines the geographical and sectoral distribution as well as the ownership structure of the largest Russian employers in a comparative context, using lists from Germany and the United Kingdom. The annexed list contributes to a more representative dataset of large firms beyond western Europe and therefore adds to the discussion on the rise of big business.
1 See, for example, Shaw, Christine, “The Large Manufacturing Employers of 1907,” Business History 25, no. 1 (1983): 42–60 Google Scholar; Fiedler, Martin, “Die 100 größten Unternehmen in Deutschland–nach der Zahl ihrer Beschäftigten—1907, 1938, 1973 und 1995,” Zeitschrift für Unternehmensgeschichte (1999): 32–66 Google Scholar; Cassis, Youssef, Big Business: The European Experience in the Twentieth Century (Oxford, 1999)Google Scholar; Wardley, Peter, “The Emergence of Big Business: The Largest Corporate Employers of Labour in the United Kingdom, Germany and the United States c. 1907,” Business History 41, no. 4 (1999): 88–116 Google Scholar; Gospel, Howard and Fiedler, Martin, “The Long-Run Dynamics of Big Firms: The 100 Largest Employers from the United States, United Kingdom, Germany, France, and Japan, 1907–2002,” in The Third Industrial Revolution in Global Business, ed. Dosi, Giovanni and Galambos, Louis (Cambridge, Mass., 2013)Google Scholar.
2 Scholars have identified some of the largest employers in the late Russian Empire only in certain regions ( McKean, Robert B., St. Petersburg between the Revolutions: Workers and Revolutionaries, June 1907–February 1917 [New Haven, 1990]CrossRefGoogle Scholar) or economic sectors ( Gatrell, Peter, Government, Industry and Rearmament in Russia, 1900–1914: The Last Argument of Tsarism [New York, 1994]Google Scholar; Borodkin, Leonid I. et al. , “ Ne rublem edinym ”: Trudovye stimuly rabochikh-tekstil'shchikov dorevoliutsionnoi Rossii [Labor incentives of textile workers in pre-revolutionary Russia] [Moscow, 2010]Google Scholar). Probably the first attempt to compile a list of the largest Russian employers is Peter Wardley, “A Global Assessment of the Large Enterprise on the Eve of the First World War: Corporate size and performance in 1912.” Paper presented at the Workshop on Global Stock Markets in the Twentieth, Faculty of Economics, University of Tokyo, 25 July 2006, http://www.computer-services.e.u-tokyo.ac.jp/p/sousei/Wardley1.pdf, in which Wardley defines the seven largest Russian employers ca. 1912. Volodymyr Kulikov and Martin Kragh's “Big Business in the Russian Empire: A European Perspective,” (Business History [advance online publication 5 Oct. 2017], http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/00076791.2017.1374369) presents an inventory of the largest private and public companies in the Russian Empire according to the criteria set up in Cassis, Big Business, based on ordinary capital and employment. These include thirty-two firms that employed more than 10,000 people.
3 Gospel and Fiedler, “Long-Run Dynamics,” 71.
4 Jeremy, David J. and Farnie, Douglas A., “The Ranking of Firms, the Counting of Employees, and the Classification of Data: A Cautionary Note,” Business History 43, no. 3 (2001): 105–18Google Scholar; Wardley, Peter, “Debate – On the Ranking of Firms: A Response to Jeremy and Farnie,” Business History 43, no. 3 (2001): 119–34CrossRefGoogle Scholar.
5 United Nations, International Standard Industrial Classification of All Economic Activities (ISIC), Rev.4 (New York, 2008).
6 The manufacturing enterprises owned by the mining department, the ministry of the navy, the main artillery department, and the Crown land office are included in the present list.
7 Finland enjoyed a high degree of autonomy until its independence in 1917. In most cases, imperial statistical publications did not include this territory in their observations.
8 By January 1913, the entire population of the Russian Empire had reached 170,902,900 or 174,099,600 together with the Finnish provinces. Source: TsSK MVD, Statisticheskii ezhegodnik Rossii za 1913 god (god desiatyi) [Statistical Yearbook of Russia, 1913] (Saint Petersburg, 1915), 58.
9 Owen, Thomas C., Russian Corporate Capitalism from Peter the Great to Perestroika (Oxford, 1995), 9Google Scholar.
10 Local distribution is specified according to Thomas Owen's classification used in the RUSCORP database. Codebook for RUSCORP: A Database of Corporations in the Russian Empire, 1700–1914 (Ann Arbor, 1992), 68–109 Google Scholar.
11 Wardley, “Global Assessment.”
12 This opens a new perspective in the old discussion about the “deviant” character of the Russian model of economic development. As Alexander Gerschenkron noted, much of Russian economic history “has been written with the ‘norm’ of the English development in mind.” Gerschenkron, “An Economic History of Russia,” Journal of Economic History 12, no. 2 (1952): 146Google Scholar. The global perspective can probably show that the Russian model was not unique as has sometimes been claimed.
13 For example, the mining department published statistics on the main mining companies in Russia in 1911, including the number of workers. See Sbornik statisticheskikh svedenii o gornozavodskoi promyshlennosti Rossii v 1911 godu (Petrograd, 1918).
14 Kandaurov, Dmitrii R., Fabrichno-zavodskie predpriiatiia Rossiiskoi imperii (iskliuchaia Finliandiiu) [The industrial enterprises of the Russian Empire] (Petrograd, 1914)Google Scholar.
15 Codes 05–39, 49, and 53 according to the UN International Standard Industrial Classification of All Economic Activities.
16 Kandaurov, Fabrichno-zavodskie predpriiatiia, 1.
17 Ibid., 10.
18 Thomas C. Owen, RUSCORP: A Database of Corporations in the Russian Empire, 1700–1914, 3rd ICPSR release, Baton Rouge, LA, 1992 [Producer]. Ann Arbor, Mich.: Inter-university Consortium for Political and Social Research [distributor], 1993, https://doi.org/10.3886/ICPSR09142.v3.
19 A. A. Brandt, V. E. Kuvichinskii, and L. E. Lebedev, Statisticheskii sbornik Min-va putei soobshcheniia. Vyp. 141: zheleznye dorogi v 1913 g. Chast’ 3: Finansovoe sostoianie. Ekspluatatsiia. Chislo i soderzhanie sluzhashchikh i rabochikh [Statistical Yearbook for 1913 published by the Ministry of Railways] (Petrograd, 1917).
20 TsSK MVD, Statisticheskii ezhegodnik Rossii za 1914 god (god odinnadtsatyi) [Statistical yearbook of Russia, 1914] (Petrograd, 1915)Google Scholar, sec. 11, 95.
21 Anfimov, Andrei M. and Korelin, Avenir P., Rossiia, 1913 god: statistiko-dokumental'nyi spravochnik [Russia, 1913: A statistical handbook] (Saint Petersburg, 1995)Google Scholar.
22 ministerstvo, Morskoe, Vsepoddaneishii otchet po Morskomu ministerstvu za 1914 god [Report of the Russian Ministry of the Navy, 1914] (Petrograd, 1915), 8, 19Google Scholar.
23 TsSK MVD, Statisticheskii ezhegodnik 1914, sec. 3, 5–6.
24 Massovye istochniki po sotsial'no-ekonomicheskoi istorii Rossii perioda kapitalizma, [Mass sources on the socio-economic history of Russia during the period of capitalism] (Moscow, 1979), 54Google Scholar.
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27 Index of Maximum Variation: Maximum reported employment as a percentage of minimum reported employment. Data for the United Kingdom from Wardley, “Debate,” 123; data for the Donbas in Tamara F. Izmest'eva, “Sezonnyi trud. Istochniki, priemy analiza, rezul'taty,” [Seasonal labor: Sources, analytical methods, results] in Istoricheskaia informatika. Informatsionnye tekhnologii i matematicheskie metody v istoricheskikh issledovaniiakh i obrazovanii, no. 2 (2013): 77–78 Google Scholar.
28 Brandt et al., Statisticheskii sbornik, table 12.
29 Gornyi departament, Otchet Gornogo departamenta za 1906 i 1907 gody [Report of the Mining Department for 1906 and 1907] (Saint Petersburg, 1909), 118.
30 Tat'iana K. Gus'kova, Nizhnetagil'skii gornozavodskii okrug Demidovykh vo vtoroi polovine XIX – nachale XX v. Zavody. Rabochie: Monografiia [Nizhny Tagil Gornozavodsky District of Demidovs' in the second half of the nineteenth – early twentieth century: Factories, workers] (Nizhnii Tagil, 2007), 5.
31 Shaw, “Large Manufacturing Employers,” 46; Gospel and Fiedler, “Long-Run Dynamics,” 72.
32 McKay, John P., Pioneers for Profit: Foreign Entrepreneurship and Russian Industrialization, 1885–1913 (Chicago, 1970), 29Google Scholar.
33 Ustav Aktsionernogo Obshchestva Kompaniia Zinger vysochaishe utverzhden 13-go iiunia 1897 goda [Charter of a joint stock company Singer, approved 13 June 1897] (Saint Petersburg, 1909).
34 Friedgut, Theodore H., Iuzovka and Revolution, vol. 1: Life and Work in Russia's Donbass, 1869–1924 (Princeton, 1994), 52Google Scholar.
35 See Senin, Aleksandr S., Zheleznodorozhnyi transport Rossii v epokhu voin i revoliutsii (1914–1922 gg.) [Railroads in Russia during wars and the Revolution, 1914–1922] (Moscow, 2009)Google Scholar.
36 Cassis, Big Business, 31.
37 Fiedler, “Die 100 größten Unternehmen”; Wardley, “Emergence of Big Business.”
38 Wardley, “Global Assessment.”
39 Fiedler, Martin and Gospel, Howard, “The Top 100 Largest Employers in UK and Germany in the Twentieth Century. Data (ca. 1907, 1935/38, 1955/57, 1972/73, 1992/95),” Cologne Economic History Paper, no. 3 (2010): 1–67 Google Scholar. Fiedler and Gospel took the data on the United Kingdom's large employers mostly from Wardley, “Emergence of Big Business.” They corrected the number of employees in five cases, including the General Post Office, the largest employer (203,600 versus Wardley's figure of 199,178).
40 Jeremy and Farnie, “Ranking of Firms,” 108.
41 See Chandler, Alfred D., “The Emergence of Managerial Capitalism,” Business History Review 58, no. 4 (1984): 491Google Scholar.
42 Excluding employment in the postal service and retailing trade. Anfimov and Korelin, Rossiia, 1913 god, sec. 9, table 7.
43 Wardley, “Emergence of Big Business,” 93.
44 Johnson, Eric A., Urbanization and Crime: Germany 1871–1914 (Cambridge, Mass., 2002), 186Google Scholar.
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46 Crisp, Olga, “Labour and Industrialization in Russia,” in The Cambridge Economic History of Europe, vol. 7: The Industrial Economies: Capital, Labour and Enterprise, part 2: The United States, Japan and Russia (Cambridge, Mass., 1978), 344Google Scholar.
47 Ibid, 402–3.
48 See Owen, Thomas C., The Corporation under Russian Law, 1800–1917: A Study in Tsarist Economic Policy (Cambridge, U.K., 2002)Google Scholar; Gregg, Amanda G. “Shareholder Rights and Share Capital: The Effect of the 1901 Russian Corporation Reform, 1890–1905,” Economic History Review 70, no. 3 (2017): 919–43Google Scholar.
49 Hannah, Leslie, “A Global Corporate Census: Publicly Traded and Close Companies in 1910,” Economic History Review 68, no. 2 (2015): 558Google Scholar.
50 Gerschenkron, Alexander, Economic Backwardness in Historical Perspective: A Book of Essays (Cambridge, Mass., 1962), 129Google Scholar.
51 The population numbers are from 1910 for both the United Kingdom and Germany. The United Kingdom does not include British colonies.
52 See the detailed comparison of British and German big businesses in Wardley, “Emergence of Big Business.”