Compensation from rulers of trading centres to merchants whose property rights had been violated was a notable feature of early European international trade. We demonstrate in a repeated-game model that demands for compensation made threats by merchant guilds to impose trade boycotts self-enforcing for individual merchants, thus removing incentives for embargo breaking that could otherwise have rendered guilds powerless. Long-distance merchants were thus protected from predation by medieval city rulers, possibly providing a foundation for the trade expansion of the `Commercial Revolution'. We also address the frequently neglected issue of whether the guilds and cities would have agreed on the level of trade which they wished to support
We develop a theory of the emergence of merchant guilds as an efficient mechanism to foster cooperat...
For nearly two thousand years, merchants have transcended national boundaries in the pursuit of trad...
The present article focuses on the conditions that allow governments to increase property rights pro...
Compensation from rulers of trading centres to merchants whose property rights had been violated was...
Greif, Milgrom and Weingast (1994) argued that the ability of the merchant guilds to encourage trade...
This article argues that, to do justice to the institutional context of international trade in the l...
The recent literature on craft guilds in late medieval and early modern Europe no longer considers t...
We develop a theory of the emergence of merchant guilds as an efficient mechanism to foster cooperat...
One of the standard objections against citizenship systems and trade organizations in the premodern ...
Based on a letter book of the London Baltic merchant Michael Mitford dating 1703-1707 this paper arg...
Original article can be found at: http://www.sciencedirect.com/ Copyright ElsevierThe present articl...
The present article focuses on the conditions that allow governments to increase property rights pro...
This article examines the role of merchant companies in structuring overseas trade in early modern E...
Traditional historiography has overestimated the significance of long-distance trade in the mediev...
One of the standard objections against guilds in the premodern world has been their exclusiveness. G...
We develop a theory of the emergence of merchant guilds as an efficient mechanism to foster cooperat...
For nearly two thousand years, merchants have transcended national boundaries in the pursuit of trad...
The present article focuses on the conditions that allow governments to increase property rights pro...
Compensation from rulers of trading centres to merchants whose property rights had been violated was...
Greif, Milgrom and Weingast (1994) argued that the ability of the merchant guilds to encourage trade...
This article argues that, to do justice to the institutional context of international trade in the l...
The recent literature on craft guilds in late medieval and early modern Europe no longer considers t...
We develop a theory of the emergence of merchant guilds as an efficient mechanism to foster cooperat...
One of the standard objections against citizenship systems and trade organizations in the premodern ...
Based on a letter book of the London Baltic merchant Michael Mitford dating 1703-1707 this paper arg...
Original article can be found at: http://www.sciencedirect.com/ Copyright ElsevierThe present articl...
The present article focuses on the conditions that allow governments to increase property rights pro...
This article examines the role of merchant companies in structuring overseas trade in early modern E...
Traditional historiography has overestimated the significance of long-distance trade in the mediev...
One of the standard objections against guilds in the premodern world has been their exclusiveness. G...
We develop a theory of the emergence of merchant guilds as an efficient mechanism to foster cooperat...
For nearly two thousand years, merchants have transcended national boundaries in the pursuit of trad...
The present article focuses on the conditions that allow governments to increase property rights pro...