Chapter 1: | The Chain Store Historically Considered |
The leading chronicler of chain stores in the 20th century provides a clear description of the role of local and firm scale economies. Lebhar explains that, although individual stores can operate with large volumes of goods,
This passage foretells some of the current research on Wal-Mart, which is modeled as interaction between economies of scale of the individual establishment (store size) and the interaction of either scale economies in transportation and oversight or scale economies in international trade.1
The growing transportation and information networks in the United States during the early 20th century were fertile fields for this type of retail innovation. By the time Wal-Mart’s founder, Sam Walton, was born in 1918, chain stores had become ubiquitous. Indeed, Springfield, Missouri, the place that Walton describes in his earliest memories, was home to a number of chains. In 1923, a Springfield native became president of United Cigar stores, which was one of the largest chains in the nation.2