The institutional revolution: measurement and the economic emergence of the modern world
In: Markets and governments in economic history
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In: Markets and governments in economic history
"This book is the first to lay out the detailed relationship between economic property rights, transaction costs, and information costs. It uses these concepts to develop a theory of economic property rights to explain why life is organized the way it is. Applications range from marriage and dueling to homesteading and ownership of wildlife"--
In: Political economy of institutions and decisions
The standard neoclassical model of economics is incapable of explaining why one form of organisation arises over another. It is a model where transaction costs are implicitly assumed to not exist; however, transaction costs are here defined as the costs of strengthening a given distribution of economic property rights, and they always exist. This book presents a study of how individuals organise resources to maximise the value of their economic rights over these resources. It offers a unified theoretical structure to deal with exchange, rights formation, and organisation that traditional economic theory often ignores. It explains how transaction costs can be reduced through reorganisation and, in the end, how the distribution of property rights that exists is the one that maximises wealth net of these transaction costs.