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Table:
Four basic contracts - Market bargain firm and government Introduction: This table tries to characterize the
four most elemental kinds of contractual modes in capitalistic countries. |
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Generally |
“Law making” by
private- and legal agents rule exchange |
Law making by
public agents rule exchange |
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Contract mode |
Market |
Bargain |
Firm |
Government |
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Contract definition and
synonymous |
Simple market contract. Classical
contract. Market
governance. Transactional contract. Normal sales relationship. Contingent
claim contract. Spot contract. Discrete contract. Short-term contract. Open
exchange contract. |
Complex market contract. Neoclassical
contract. Trilateral governance (low freq.). Bilateral governance (high
freq.). Obligational market contract. Long-term contract. Arbitrage contract.
(Franchising, joint venture) |
Bundle of simple and complex market and non-market contracts now including employment contracts. Relational
contract. Transaction-specific governance. Vertical integration. Authority
relation. Nexus of contracts. Closed exchange. |
Bundle of simple and complex market and non-market contracts, plus the powers to make the law, and the sanction powers to enforce it. Narrow
definition 1; Super firm. Public governance. Broad
definition incl. norms, habits, culture 2: Social contract Social matrix. Social
context. Socioeconomic structure. |
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Conditions under which the mechanism minimizes transaction costs: Note
that independent of contract mode TCE
always assumes that agents are boundedly rational and opportunistic. |
Market
is ‘fat’. Buyer and seller transaction-frequency and identity is unimportant.
Standardized, durable or non-durable, simple or complex goods and services.
Uncertainty is small or high, and few measurement problems. Symmetric
information. Small asset specificity. |
Market
is ‘thin’. Buyer and seller transact seldom or often. Identity is ex post
important. Customized often complex, durable good and services. Medium
uncertainty. Measurement problems. Asymmetric information. Medium to high
asset specificity. |
Employer
and employee transact frequent on bundles of services. Identity is ex post
important. Customized often complex, non-durable good and services.
Uncertainty is often high. Measurement problems. Asymmetric information. High
asset specificity. |
For
reasons of competitiveness governments will at best do no worse than private
business in governing commercial transactions. But government’s minimizes
transaction cost by making ‘the rules of the game’ played by the private
agents. E.g. property-, contract law and regulation. |
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Other aspects |
Exchange
is voluntary. Relevant
conditions are seldom naturally found in modern societies. However they are
often artificially simulated by governmental institutions. E.g. warranty
laws, public approval of medical products, safety and quality standards. But
these procedures are costly and then the regime is not necessary cost
dominant. |
Exchange
is voluntary. Relevant
conditions are common in modern society. The
cost of bargain increases with: Specificity, complexity of contract,
uncertainty, frequency and difficulty of legal enforcement. This pushes for
merging the business of the buyer and the seller. |
Exchange
is voluntary. Relevant
conditions are common in modern society. The
cost of firm exchange increase with number of diverse activities within the firm,
and weakness of competitive check. This push for splitting up the firm in
smaller less diversified firms. |
Exchange
may be mandatory. E.g. tax payments and national service. |
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The costs of transacting: Note
that increased specialization of labor decreases transformation cost and
increase the need for exchange. This latter increase transaction cost. This
tradeoff is latent in all TCE reasoning. |
COORDINATION: Moderate
search cost. Cheap
to draft. Few contingencies and they are clear. Low cost of monitoring.
Litigation is not likely, but when it does occur costs are low. MOTIVATION: No
shirking or under performance because of the instant competitive check. Note:
Transaction cost dominant. |
COORDINATION: Moderate
search cost. Expensive
to draft and negotiate. Many contingencies and they may be unclear or
unpredictable. High cost of monitoring and arbitraging. Litigation is
expensive or simply not possible. MOTIVATION: High
ex post cost of under performance and political bargaining. Cost is moderate
due to competitive check. |
COORDINATION: Low
ex post search cost. Low cost of drafting employment contract, and adapting
uncertainty. High cost of administrating, monitoring, processing information,
training employees. MOTIVATION: High
cost of shirking and political efforts. Competitive
check is weakened. It takes time to discover inefficiency. E. g. the day of
bankruptcy. |
Only
commercial: See above. COORDINATION:
Same
as firm. MOTIVATION: Very
high cost of shirking and political efforts because the competitive check is
very slow. E. g. it took 70 years to find out that socialism was
uneconomical. Non-commercial; COORDINATION: The
cost of making the law and enforcing it is e. g, courts, police, army,
regulating agencies, monetary system. MOTIVATION: There
is huge scope for bribing officials, judges, and politicians, especially in
socialist economies. Many laws are inefficient. They make prices less social
competitive e. g. trade restrictions, concessioned monopolies (public
utilities), and the entire tax and transfer system. |
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Price setting: The
most vital focus of both coordination and motivation. |
Invisible Hand: The
law of demand and supply determines the price. Parties only capable of making
small price adjustment without jeopardizing competitiveness. Economics is
predominant although A. Smith notes the trading spirit of human nature. |
Bargaining Theory: The
final price is negotiated and depends on the information of the parties, the
facts of the thing being exchanged, the norms of price in the business, the
threat values (substitutes) and the skill of the bargaining parties. |
Visible Hand: Normally
no specific prices on every identifiable service from the employee. The labor
relation is a complex bundle of services bought for a salary set by the
employer. Non-economic
issues are now important to. |
Democracy: We
may usefully view politicians as selling a social contract that among other
thing include budget decisions determining tax and public services available
for the voters. The voters elect the political team believed to offer the
best deal. Economics is only one of several important aspect of the social
contract. |
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The means of coordination: Deals
with the substantive and procedural aspects of contracts. |
1)
Standards in the contract. E.g. costs and prices are tied to an outside price
index. Or the product has to satisfy some quality code set up by a private or
governmental agency. 2)
The courts. Rare. Contract so clear that court outcome is known ahead.
Monetary damage. |
1)
Standards and rules in the contract. Ditto market. Rules; damage clauses,
good faith deposits, mark up clauses. 2) A private arbitrage system specified
in advance. One or third party control of terms. Agreement to agree clause.
3) The courts. Should award specific performance. |
1)
Mutual work adjustment. 2) Direct work supervision. 3) Standardization of
work output, e.g. quality control. 4)
Standardization of work process, e.g. job design. 5) Standardization of
input, e.g. educational requirements. 6) Standardization of norms, e.g.
corporate culture. |
1)
Administrative means of control such as: Physical planning, prohibitions,
commands, permissions, norms, rationing. 2)
Traditional economic means of control such as: Subsidies, taxes, and user
payment. 3)
New economic means of control such as: Mortgage systems, mandatory insurance,
and transferable pollution rights. Options 4)
Information campaigns. |
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Note
that for reward or sanction to have any effect on behavior they must be
related. This is only possible through some kind of monitoring. The
efficiency on monitoring increase: 1)
The smaller the profit unit it is possibly to distinguish and, 2)
The more social competitive is the prices that make up the profit. Note
furthermore that only sign often differentiates rewards and sanction. |
By
competing on terms of contract: Price. REWARD: Buyer:
His surplus of the exchange. That is the value he attaches to the good he
receives less the value he attach to the good he give up (e.g. money price). Seller:
His surplus of the exchange. That is the value he attaches to the good he
receives (money price) less the value he attach to the good he give up (e.g.
cost of producing it). SANCTION: To
buy or sell from somebody else. |
By
competing on terms of contract: Price, quality, delivery accuracy, dispute
resolution system. REWARDS: Buyer:
Same as under market but now the good bought is more complex. Seller:
Same as under market but now the good sold is more complex. SANCTIONS: Stop
of future exchange. Included non-punitive
sanctions for breach in contracts. Court
sanctions: Monetary damage or specific performance. |
By
competing on terms of contract: Salary, working environment. REWARDS: Employer;
Get the value of the labor services. Employee:
Salary, promotion possibilities, status, and bonuses. SANCTIONS: Get
fired. Loose status. Reduced salary. Loss of prospect for promotion.
Degradation. Court
sanctions: Monetary damage or specific performance. |
By
competing on terms of contract: E.g. Taxes, public services, environment-,
family-, social-, and crime-policy. REWARDS: Voters;
Broadly their surplus is the value they place on stability, safety,
environment, freedom to speak, right to doing business and so on, less their
tax payment. Politicians;
Broadly their surplus is the value from salary, idealism, and support and
status from interest groups. SANCTIONS: Politicians
risk votes for breach of promises. But the issue is more the sanctions the
citizens face for breaking the law: No limits: From fines to death penalty. |
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Efficiency: Transaction cost economics relies on competition to sort out the
inefficient modes of organization, Williamson [1985, p.23] |
Potentially
short run efficient. A matter of days. |
Potentially
medium short-run efficient. A matter of months. |
Potentially
long run efficient. A matter of years. At worst to day of bankruptcy. |
Potentially
very long run efficient. A matter of many years. E.g. it took 70 years before
the communist system broke down. |
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- Copyright 1997-2008, ViamInvest. Reproduced with permission of the copyright owner. Further reproduction prohibited without permission. Legal notice. |
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