Tempo Social (Sep 2021)

Warring Brothers: Constructing Komatsu’s and Caterpillar’s Globalization

  • Caleb Goods,
  • Andrew Herod,
  • Bradon Ellem,
  • Al Rainnie

DOI
https://doi.org/10.11606/0103-2070.ts.2021.183007
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 33, no. 2
pp. 123 – 142

Abstract

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Abstract We detail how the world’s two largest engineering machinery firms, Japan’s Komatsu and the US’s Caterpillar, actively managed geographical concerns to become global actors. We argue that their globalization was not a teleological given but had to be proactively made. Both the state and organized labor played significant roles in shaping their geographical evolutions, as did their efforts to outmaneuver each other spatially. Their globalization, then, was part of a broader spatial politics under capitalism.

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