What is capitalist monopoly?

1At the end of the 9th century and the beginning of the 20th century, in capitalist countries, with the continuous development of social productive forces, the trend of production socialization was strengthened, and the market and capital were continuously concentrated in a few large or even super-large enterprises. These enterprises reach an agreement on production scale, market sales and price level, forming a monopoly, such as trust (USA), cartel (Germany) and syndicate (France). With the strengthening of their economic strength, politically, the capitalist countries launched Eight-Nation Alliance's war of aggression against China at that time, which is a manifestation of this behavior and has always been despised by our country. . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

However, in recent years, with the development of state-owned enterprises in China, we will be surprised to find that our state-owned enterprises have also taken this road. However, the development of our state-owned enterprises is not monopolized by technological progress, and the other is by administrative orders, which is more harmful than capitalist countries, because they can obtain excess profits without technological progress and exploit and blackmail people crazily. Take the American trust company Mobil Oil Company as an example, because it monopolized the oil market in those years. . . . American enterprises, monopolizing the market, rely on superior research and development capabilities and technical strength, such as Microsoft and Apple in the United States. . . . . After monopolizing the market, such enterprises will bring about earth-shaking technological progress and improve people's quality of life. In our state-owned enterprises, take China Petroleum as an example, the price of gasoline is twice that of the United States in the same period. When human resources in China are much cheaper than those in the United States, our oil companies are still losing money. Except for the huge corruption, it is monopolized by China, and its efficiency is extremely low. . . . . . . What's more, the United States later passed an anti-monopoly law to oppose the market monopoly of giant enterprises. For example, Rockefeller's Mobil oil has been divided into dozens of small and medium-sized enterprises, and although our country has also passed the anti-monopoly law, the state-owned enterprises have developed too much to fail. . . It has become a huge cancer of social economy, which has seriously hindered the development of small and medium-sized enterprises in China. . . .