Professor Posin is to be congratulated on his recent article in this Review, The Coase Theorem: If Pigs Could Fly, for creating a precise example that purports to disprove the Coase Theorem. Legal scholarship should strive more towards verifiable or falsifiable statements about the law. Of course, falsifiable statements are a risky strategy, and in this case the risk has materialized. Posin\u27s claim—that his example shows a flaw in the Coase Theorem—is false. Posin\u27s claim is an especially bold one, for his example deals with a shifting legal entitlement between two producers. Most successful attacks on the Coase Theorem have critiqued its purported applicability to consumers. Indeed, Professor Coase himself has recently declared tha...
The Coase Theorem, so coined by George Stigler in 1966, based on Ronald H. Coase's oft-quoted 1960 a...
Coase theorem. Asserts that if transaction costs are nil and if property rights (i.e. rights to poll...
The most cited law review article ever published, the late Ronald Coase's 'The Problem of Social Cos...
Professor Posin is to be congratulated on his recent article in this Review, The Coase Theorem: If ...
In his article, The Coase Theorem: If Pigs Could Fly, Professor Daniel Posin purports to demonstra...
In The Problem of Social Cost Ronald Coase was highly critical of the work of Cambridge University...
Poor Ronald Coase. In an introductory essay to a recently published collection of his articles, Coas...
International audienceThis article aims at understanding Coase’s apparently paradoxical attitude tow...
The Coase Theorem is a simple proposition-in the absence of transaction costs, a Pareto optimal resu...
Abstract. Patrick Gunning refuses to acknowledge the most salient arguments against the “Chicago ” l...
The arguments collectively known as the Coase Theorem criticize the judicial policy of requiring bus...
Ronald Coase\u27s The Nature of the Firm (The Firm) may well be the second most cited article in law...
Professor Coase\u27s article, The Problem of Social Cost, played a significant role in launching the...
In law as well as economics, the most well-known aspect of Coase\u27s The Problem of Social Cost, ...
This article suggests that the law of Deuteronomy 23:25, 26, which allows all people unlimited acce...
The Coase Theorem, so coined by George Stigler in 1966, based on Ronald H. Coase's oft-quoted 1960 a...
Coase theorem. Asserts that if transaction costs are nil and if property rights (i.e. rights to poll...
The most cited law review article ever published, the late Ronald Coase's 'The Problem of Social Cos...
Professor Posin is to be congratulated on his recent article in this Review, The Coase Theorem: If ...
In his article, The Coase Theorem: If Pigs Could Fly, Professor Daniel Posin purports to demonstra...
In The Problem of Social Cost Ronald Coase was highly critical of the work of Cambridge University...
Poor Ronald Coase. In an introductory essay to a recently published collection of his articles, Coas...
International audienceThis article aims at understanding Coase’s apparently paradoxical attitude tow...
The Coase Theorem is a simple proposition-in the absence of transaction costs, a Pareto optimal resu...
Abstract. Patrick Gunning refuses to acknowledge the most salient arguments against the “Chicago ” l...
The arguments collectively known as the Coase Theorem criticize the judicial policy of requiring bus...
Ronald Coase\u27s The Nature of the Firm (The Firm) may well be the second most cited article in law...
Professor Coase\u27s article, The Problem of Social Cost, played a significant role in launching the...
In law as well as economics, the most well-known aspect of Coase\u27s The Problem of Social Cost, ...
This article suggests that the law of Deuteronomy 23:25, 26, which allows all people unlimited acce...
The Coase Theorem, so coined by George Stigler in 1966, based on Ronald H. Coase's oft-quoted 1960 a...
Coase theorem. Asserts that if transaction costs are nil and if property rights (i.e. rights to poll...
The most cited law review article ever published, the late Ronald Coase's 'The Problem of Social Cos...