807 research outputs found
La economía y sus disciplinas conexas
El presente artículo aborda la expansión de los límites de la economía, la cual se refleja en la cada vez mayor participación de los economistas en otras ciencias sociales. El autor niega tajantemente que esta migración de los economistas a otras disciplinas se deba a la resolución de todos los problemas del sistema económico. El autor asevera además que en la medida en que la expansión de la Economía solo se deba solo al uso de técnicas o métodos propios de esta ciencia, esta tendencia podría ir en retroceso. El autor concluye en que los economistas deben seguir expandiendo su rango de estudio, no con el fin de contribuir con otras ciencias sociales, sino buscando comprender mejor el sistema económico. Esto tendrá como consecuencia la continua expansión de la Economía hacia otras ciencias sociales. This article discusses the expansion of the boundaries of Economics, which is reflected in the growing participation of economists in other social sciences. The author emphatically denies that this migration of economists to other disciplines is due to the resolution of all the problems of the economic system. The author also states that to the extent that the expansion of economics is only due to the use of its techniques or methods, this trend could even go in reverse. The author concludes that economists should continue to expand its range of study, not in order to contribute to other social sciences, but seeking a better understanding of the economic system. This will result in the continued expansion of Economics towards other social sciences
Social Preferences and the Efficiency of Bilateral Exchange
Under what conditions do social preferences, such as altruism or a concern for fair outcomes, generate efficient trade? I analyze theoretically a simple bilateral exchange game: Each player sequentially takes an action that reduces his own material payoff but increases the other player’s. Each player’s preferences may depend on both his/her own material payoff and the other player’s. I identify necessary conditions and sufficient conditions on the players’ preferences for the outcome of their interaction to be Pareto efficient. The results have implications for interpreting the rotten kid theorem, gift exchange in the laboratory, and gift exchange in the field
Regulation and the Evolution of Corporate Boards: Monitoring, Advising or Window Dressing?
An earlier version of this paper was entitled “Deregulation and Board
Composition: Evidence on the Value of the Revolving Door.”It is generally agreed that boards are endogenously determined institutions that serve both oversight and advisory roles in a firm. While the oversight role of boards has been extensively studied, relatively few studies have examined the advisory role of corporate boards. We examine the participation of political directors on the boards of natural gas companies between 1930 and 1998. We focus on the expansion of federal regulation of the natural gas industry in 1938 and 1954 and subsequent partial deregulation in 1986. Using data sets covering the periods from 1930 to 1990 and 1978 to 1998, we test whether regulation and deregulation altered the composition of companies' boards as the firms' environment changed. In particular, did regulation cause an increase and deregulation a decrease in the number of political directors
on corporate boards? We find evidence that the number of political directors increases as firms shift from market to political competition. Specifically, the regulation of
natural gas is associated with an increase in the number of political directors and deregulation is associated with a decrease in the number of political directors on boards
Ernst Freund as Precursor of the Rational Study of Corporate Law
Gindis, David, Ernst Freund as Precursor of the Rational Study of Corporate Law (October 27, 2017). Journal of Institutional Economics, Forthcoming. Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=2905547, doi: https://dx.doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.2905547The rise of large business corporations in the late 19th century compelled many American observers to admit that the nature of the corporation had yet to be understood. Published in this context, Ernst Freund's little-known The Legal Nature of Corporations (1897) was an original attempt to come to terms with a new legal and economic reality. But it can also be described, to paraphrase Oliver Wendell Holmes, as the earliest example of the rational study of corporate law. The paper shows that Freund had the intuitions of an institutional economist, and engaged in what today would be called comparative institutional analysis. Remarkably, his argument that the corporate form secures property against insider defection and against outsiders anticipated recent work on entity shielding and capital lock-in, and can be read as an early contribution to what today would be called the theory of the firm.Peer reviewe
The theory of the firm and its critics: a stocktaking and assessment
Includes bibliographical references."Prepared for Jean-Michel Glachant and Eric Brousseau, eds. New Institutional Economics: A Textbook, Cambridge, Cambridge University Press.""This version: August 22, 2005."Since its emergence in the 1970s the modern economic or Coasian theory of the
firm has been discussed and challenged by sociologists, heterodox economists, management
scholars, and other critics. This chapter reviews and assesses these critiques, focusing on behavioral
issues (bounded rationality and motivation), process (including path dependence and the selection argument), entrepreneurship, and the challenge from knowledge-based
theories of the firm
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