First, in 1776, Adam Smith published a classical economics doctrine, The Wealth of Nations, in which he argued the economic advantages that organizations and society would gain from the division of labor, the breakdown of jobs into narrow and repetitive tasks. Second, probably the most important, pre-twentieth-century influence on
First, in 1776, Adam Smith published a classical economics doctrine, The Wealth of Nations, in which he argued the economic advantages that organizations and society would gain from the division of labor, the breakdown of jobs into narrow and repetitive tasks. Second, probably the most important, pre-twentieth-century influence on