The golden passport Harvard Business School, the limits of capitalism, and the moral failure of the MBA elite

Duff McDonald

Book - 2017

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Subjects
Published
New York, NY : Harper Business [2017]
Language
English
Main Author
Duff McDonald (author)
Edition
First edition
Physical Description
ix, 657 pages ; 24 cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references (pages [583]-626) and index.
ISBN
9780062347176
  • Introduction
  • 1. The Experimenters: Charles Eliot and Abbott Lawrence Lowell
  • 2. A Search for Mission and Method: Edwin Gay
  • 3. The "Scientist": Frederick W. Taylor
  • 4. The First Decade: 1910-1919
  • 5. The Case for the Case Method
  • 6. The Idealist: Wallace Brett Donham
  • 7. The Benefactors: George Baker, Sr. and Jr
  • 8. Doctor Who?: Elton Mayo
  • 9. A Decade in Review: 1920-1929
  • 10. The First Broadside: Abraham Flexner
  • 11. Friends in High Places
  • 12. The Marriage of Moral Authority and Managerial Control
  • 13. The Venture Capitalist: Georges Doriot
  • 14. A Decade in Review: 1930-1939
  • 15. The West Point of Capitalism
  • 16. The Darling of the Business Elite: Donald David
  • 17. From the "Retreads" to the Crème de la Crème
  • 18. Temporary Support of the Workingman
  • 19. The Class the Dollars Fell On: The '49ers
  • 20. A Decade in Review: 1940-1949
  • 21. Organization Man and the Corporate Cocoon
  • 22. The Power Elite
  • 23. The Hidden Hand
  • 24. The Specialists: Robert Schlaifer and Howard Raiffa
  • 25. The Philanthropist: Henry Ford II
  • 26. Spreading the Gospel
  • 27. Gentlemen (and a Few Ladies)
  • 28. The Legitimizer: Alfred Chandler
  • 29. A Decade in Review: 1950-1959
  • 30. Peak Influence
  • 31. The Good, the Bad, and the Ugly
  • 32. The Case Against the Case Method
  • 33. A Decade in Review: 1960-1969
  • 34. The Myth of the Well-Educated Manager
  • 35. Harvard Business Review: Origins, Heyday, and Scandal
  • 36. Can Leaders Be Manufactured?
  • 37. Can Entrepreneurship Be Learned?
  • 38. The Second Broadside: Derek Bok
  • 39. Managing Our Way to Economic Decline
  • 40. A Decade in Review: 1970-1979
  • 41. The Subversive Nature of a Social Conscience
  • 42. The Murder of Managerialism
  • 43. Managerialism Was Already Dead
  • 44. The Kindergarten Class Play
  • 45. Monetizing It
  • 46. The Monopolist: Michael Porter
  • 47. Self-interest, with a Side Dish of Ethics
  • 48. Life Out of Balance
  • 49. A Decade in Review: 1980-1989
  • 50. The Money Mill
  • 51. The Thorn in Their Side
  • 52. A Decade in Review: 1990-1999
  • 53. The Microsoft of Business Schools
  • 54. The Men Who Would Be President
  • 55. The Shame: Jeff Skilling
  • 56. The High Art of Self-Congratulation
  • 57. The Loyalty Program
  • 58. The CEO Pay Gap
  • 59. A Decade in Review: 2000-2009
  • 60. The Next Generation
  • 61. Nitin Nohria for President
  • Epilogue: Can HBS Lead the Way Forward?
  • Author's Note
  • Notes
  • Index
Review by Booklist Review

McDonald charts the rise of one of America's most influential institutions, Harvard Business School (HBS). Acclaimed for similar reporting, McDonald delves into a century-long history of an elite program, focusing on one theme: HBS is losing sight of its main goal to educate leaders who make a difference in the world. Although the author did not have any interviews with HBS employees, The Golden Passport is a culmination of three years of research via historical documents and past interviews with alumni and those influential to the school. This tome can be approached as a straight read-through, or picked and digested based on chapters of interest. History buffs and scholars will find this book educational. McDonald's reporting highlights the school's influence, such as detailing how HBS helped the U.S. win WWII by marrying mathematics and statistics to war strategy, and also how HBS helped define and establish the foundations of managerial knowledge in the country and put American management at the forefront of global business. The examination includes the positive and negative, along with McDonald's musings on how the institution has impacted modern corporate society.--Adams, Jennifer Copyright 2017 Booklist

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Exploring how Harvard Business School became a ticket to the highest echelons of money, power, and influence, McDonald (The Firm) chronicles the school's history in an irreverent, cynical, and frequently funny exposé of its pretensions. He begins by describing the school's founding in 1908 to, in one professor's words, raise "the oldest of the arts" into the "youngest of the professions." Despite these high-minded words, McDonald explains that HBS was launched largely to provide a credential for business-destined blue bloods who required the prestige of a Harvard degree. HBS eventually matured, but McDonald deftly skewers the vacuity at the core of the MBA curriculum, lamenting "how many members of a highly intelligent faculty have to resort to bold claims of discovering that which we already knew." He also questions why the school doesn't do more to shape the ethics of business, devoting chapters to ignominious graduates like Jeffrey Skilling of Enron and to the growing gap between the pay of ordinary workers and CEOs. This institutional history refreshingly substitutes skepticism for reverence, questioning the limits of business education and of capitalism in general. Agent: David Kuhn, Kuhn Projects. (Apr.) © Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Kirkus Book Review

A massively detailed history of Harvard Business School since its founding in 1908 and a searing critique of the school's impact on American capitalism.Upon beginning the "thirty-month odyssey" of researching his latest book, New York Observer contributing editor McDonald (The Firm: The Story of McKinsey and Its Secret Influence on American Business, 2014, etc.) realized that it constituted the third in a trilogy of sorts, following The Firm and, before that, Last Man Standing: The Ascent of Jamie Dimon and JPMorgan Chase (2009). In The Firm, the author included a section about the connections between the legendary consulting firm and the Harvard MBA program, a section titled "McHarvard." McDonald's deep research into the 100-plus years of HBSthe faculty members, the courses offered, many of the studentsis undoubtedly impressive. However, the decade-by-decade sections of the history often drag, featuring facts and anecdotes most likely to interest only faculty and students. When McDonald broadens his focus to examine the impact of HBS outside the campus, the book becomes more relevant to general readers. The author concludes that while HBS has always possessed the ability to improve business practices in the United States and around the globe, most faculty members have failed to imbue most of their MBA students with the values needed to make true improvements or innovations a reality. McDonald hoped to share his impressions with HBS administrators and active faculty, but he reports that he received rejections from nearly everyone he approached. Throughout his critique, the author emphasizes the unwillingness within the MBA program to delve into the responsible roles of businesses other than earning as much money as possible. As McDonald rightly notes, deep investigations into the economic inequality spawned by the current capitalist system are egregiously missing from the Harvard MBA curriculum. A tome that alternates between a useful expos and a slogbest for HBS alumni and business historians. Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.