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I agree with your first ideas, but not the last. There are successful companies that have allowed significant independence to the lower levels of management and employees to a point where I wouldn't class all companies command economies in any strongly centralized sense.

Also, the failure to generate new economic activity (or supressing new activity) is a prevalent theme in failed companies. Furthermore, when you look at new innovative products coming out of large companies, you'll often spot a phase goes something like: "A small group of employees broke off and put together <widget> after hours or out of sight of the upper management, etc". The new activity or market areas often come in spite of the controls in big companies.



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