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E-grāmata: Economics of Adaptation and Long-term Relationships

  • Formāts: PDF+DRM
  • Izdošanas datums: 29-Mar-2019
  • Izdevniecība: Edward Elgar Publishing Ltd
  • Valoda: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781788979665
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  • Formāts: PDF+DRM
  • Izdošanas datums: 29-Mar-2019
  • Izdevniecība: Edward Elgar Publishing Ltd
  • Valoda: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781788979665

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Do institutions matter in economic theory? Or is the economic analysis of institutions a distraction from the most important action? Indeed, does Vernon Smiths notion of the institution-free core of formal economic theory encompass that most important action? Would that render an economics of organization almost devoid of economic content?

The author takes up an approach that is more agnostic, inter-disciplinary and even a little irreverent. What can theory do and not do? Theory can stimulate questions about how parties manage competing demands for commitment and flexibility in their relationships but what blind spots persist? The book opens with an informal tour of the economics of system design out of which an economics of adaptation ultimately emerged. It then offers explorations, via the application of the economics of adaptation in both law and economics relating to how parties manage relationships within the firm, within the context of long-term contracts and, most vividly, within the context of antitrust conspiracy.





Advanced undergraduates, graduate students and teaching faculty in economics, public policy, management and law will find the book relevant, as it maps out connections between literatures that are not often made explicit. For historians of economic thought the book lays out a much richer understanding of what the economics of organization is (and is not), and situates it next to design economics.
Preface vii
1 The provenance of an economics of adaptation in long-term relationships
1(45)
The provenance of efficient adaptation: take one
17(14)
The provenance of efficient adaptation: take two
31(8)
The path taken thus far
39(1)
The path in the future
40(6)
2 The single-entity question in antitrust: ownership, control and delegation in organizations
46(28)
The single-entity question
49(8)
Whence the single-entity concept?
57(3)
Some law and economics of conflict and control in organizations
60(3)
A two-stage sequence of single-entity tests
63(9)
Conclusion
72(2)
3 Platform competition, the Apple eBooks case and the meaning of agreement to fix prices
74(40)
The conspiracy
78(7)
The economic theory of collusion and the practice of collusion
85(20)
The united front
105(7)
Conclusion
112(2)
4 Adaptation in long-term exchange relations: evidence of the complementarity and ancillarity of dimensions of electricity marketing contracts
114(52)
Models and hypotheses
119(20)
Data and estimation
139(16)
Conclusion
155(2)
Appendices
157(9)
5 The financial structure of Commercial Revolution: financing long-distance trade in Venice 1190--1220 and Venetian Crete 1278-1400
166(55)
Historical narratives
170(9)
The data
179(12)
Hypothesis testing
191(17)
Contract selection and probit estimation: Crete 1330--55
208(9)
Conclusion
217(4)
6 Knowledge spillovers and industrial policy: evidence from the Advanced Technology Program and the Department of Defense
221(34)
In the beginning
223(3)
The National Cooperative Research Act and nondisclosure agreements
226(5)
The Advanced Technology Program
231(3)
Data
234(9)
Results
243(8)
Whence competitiveness?
251(2)
Conclusion
253(2)
References 255(20)
Author index 275(4)
Subject index 279(7)
Case law index 286
Dean Victor Williamson, Independent Researcher