We build a model to investigate the interaction between trade, the supply of law and order, and the nature of governing political institutions. To supply law and order necessary for a representative merchant to create wealth, a ruler (i) appoints officials capable of coercion and (ii) introduces a system of taxation. When potential gains from trade are important, the demand for law and order is high but appointing numerous officials capable of coercion may pave the way to arbitrary and distortive expropriation. Delegating the task of appointing offi- cials to the better-informed merchant lowers the cost of sustaining good market institutions, but exacerbates the latter's temptation to escape taxation. When gains from trade are instead low d...
This article places a new account of the English state's changing framework for economic regulation ...
The seventeenth century saw England\u27s government more fully monopolize the legitimate exercise of...
This thesis examines how English towns and townsmen interacted with the aristocracy in the late midd...
We build a model to investigate the interaction between trade, the supply of law and order, and the ...
We develop a theory of the emergence of merchant guilds as an efficient mechanism to foster cooperat...
We develop a theory of the emergence of merchant guilds as an efficient mechanism to foster cooperat...
This is the final version. Available from the American Economic Association via the DOI in this reco...
Modern advocates of corporate self-regulation have drawn unlikely inspiration from the Middle Ages. ...
The discussion will proceed in three parts. Section I makes the case that a distinct set of merchant...
Economic institutions encompassing increasingly sophisticated concepts of risk-sharing and liability...
The present article focuses on the conditions that allow governments to increase property rights pro...
Economic institutions encompassing increasingly sophisticated concepts of risksharing and liability ...
Modern advocates of corporate self-regulation have drawn unlikely inspiration from the Middle Ages. ...
The process of law enforcement helped to shape the state in the Middle Ages. This article uses an ex...
The trade in wine between Gascony, part of the Plantagenet-held duchy of Aquitaine (1152–1453),and t...
This article places a new account of the English state's changing framework for economic regulation ...
The seventeenth century saw England\u27s government more fully monopolize the legitimate exercise of...
This thesis examines how English towns and townsmen interacted with the aristocracy in the late midd...
We build a model to investigate the interaction between trade, the supply of law and order, and the ...
We develop a theory of the emergence of merchant guilds as an efficient mechanism to foster cooperat...
We develop a theory of the emergence of merchant guilds as an efficient mechanism to foster cooperat...
This is the final version. Available from the American Economic Association via the DOI in this reco...
Modern advocates of corporate self-regulation have drawn unlikely inspiration from the Middle Ages. ...
The discussion will proceed in three parts. Section I makes the case that a distinct set of merchant...
Economic institutions encompassing increasingly sophisticated concepts of risk-sharing and liability...
The present article focuses on the conditions that allow governments to increase property rights pro...
Economic institutions encompassing increasingly sophisticated concepts of risksharing and liability ...
Modern advocates of corporate self-regulation have drawn unlikely inspiration from the Middle Ages. ...
The process of law enforcement helped to shape the state in the Middle Ages. This article uses an ex...
The trade in wine between Gascony, part of the Plantagenet-held duchy of Aquitaine (1152–1453),and t...
This article places a new account of the English state's changing framework for economic regulation ...
The seventeenth century saw England\u27s government more fully monopolize the legitimate exercise of...
This thesis examines how English towns and townsmen interacted with the aristocracy in the late midd...