"Rutgers historian Wasserman's thesis is that the relationship between business and politics is crucial to understanding Mexican history; he explores this relationship from the dictatorship of Porfirio Diaz through the Mexican Revolution . . . Recommended."—R. Acuña, CHOICE "This is the best economic history available for Mexico in the years 1854 to 1940. The scholarship is impeccable, with scrupulous research in both Mexican and US archives, private collections, and published material, the analysis is logical, careful, and consistent, and the writing is clear, accessible, and to the point."—William Beezley, University of Arizona "The central hypothesis—the creation and function of an interactive, mutually-balancing and mutually-reinforcing 'elite-foreign enterprise system' in operation over the period under discussion—is an important and convincing contribution to the field, and one which challenges both conventional wisdom and 'traditional' historiography. It issues an important corrective to recent interpretations, which have sought to underestimate the role of the state in promoting enterprise and economic development."—Paul Garner, University of Leeds "Wasserman has produced a valuable contribution to the historiography of Mexico's commercial sector in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. His arguments are well-evidenced and clearly-articulated through prose that is sophisticated yet accessible. His meticulous research in US and Mexican archives and special collections is unrivaled and allows his work to challenge existing paradigms of control, exploitation, and foreign participation in the Mexican economy....This study will no doubt become required reading for graduate students in Mexican and Latin America history, and compel many of us to revise our course content on Mexico between 1880 and 1940."—Monica Rankin, Canadian Journal of History