Abstract: We examine a setting in which property rights are initially ambiguously de\u85ned. Whether the parties go to court to remove the ambiguity or bargain and settle before or after trial, they incur enforcement costs. When the parties bargain, a version of the Coase theorem holds. However, despite the additional costs of going to court, other ex-post ine ¢ ciencies, and the absence of incomplete information, going to court may ex-ante Pareto dominate settling out of court. This is especially true in dynamic settings, where obtaining a court decision today saves on future enforcement costs. When the parties do not negotiate and go to court, a simple rule for the initial ambiguous assignment of property rights maximizes net surplus
Extant theories on the application of the Coase Theorem to the development market have focused on th...
Coase’s seminal 1960 paper on externalities is associated with the so-called Coase Theorem which is ...
This article extends the Coase Conjecture to ethical issues of property rights. The Coase Conjecture...
We examine a setting in which property rights are initially ambiguously defined. Whether the parties...
We examine a setting in which property rights are initially ambiguously defined. Whether the parties...
We examine a setting in which property rights are initially ambiguously defined. Whether the parties...
This paper explores the extent to which ex ante transaction costs may lead to failures of the Coase ...
A central challenge in securing property rights is the subversion of justice through legalskill, bri...
The Coase theorem suggests that given well-defined property rights and zero transaction cost, agents...
In his pioneering work on transaction costs, Ronald Coase presupposed a picture of property as a bun...
In this paper we investigate the possible consequences of different institutional settings (in casu ...
We make an attempt to broaden the Coase invariance theorem by including asymmetry of information. Gi...
The Coase theorem posits: If [1] property rights are perfect, [2] contracts are enforceable, [3] pre...
This Article models private ownership as a conflict resolution mechanism and contends that for the C...
During my first weeks as a graduate student in economics, a professor described the Coase Theorem as...
Extant theories on the application of the Coase Theorem to the development market have focused on th...
Coase’s seminal 1960 paper on externalities is associated with the so-called Coase Theorem which is ...
This article extends the Coase Conjecture to ethical issues of property rights. The Coase Conjecture...
We examine a setting in which property rights are initially ambiguously defined. Whether the parties...
We examine a setting in which property rights are initially ambiguously defined. Whether the parties...
We examine a setting in which property rights are initially ambiguously defined. Whether the parties...
This paper explores the extent to which ex ante transaction costs may lead to failures of the Coase ...
A central challenge in securing property rights is the subversion of justice through legalskill, bri...
The Coase theorem suggests that given well-defined property rights and zero transaction cost, agents...
In his pioneering work on transaction costs, Ronald Coase presupposed a picture of property as a bun...
In this paper we investigate the possible consequences of different institutional settings (in casu ...
We make an attempt to broaden the Coase invariance theorem by including asymmetry of information. Gi...
The Coase theorem posits: If [1] property rights are perfect, [2] contracts are enforceable, [3] pre...
This Article models private ownership as a conflict resolution mechanism and contends that for the C...
During my first weeks as a graduate student in economics, a professor described the Coase Theorem as...
Extant theories on the application of the Coase Theorem to the development market have focused on th...
Coase’s seminal 1960 paper on externalities is associated with the so-called Coase Theorem which is ...
This article extends the Coase Conjecture to ethical issues of property rights. The Coase Conjecture...