Economic institutions encompassing increasingly sophisticated concepts of risk-sharing and liability flourished in Europe beginning in the High Middle Ages. These innovations occurred in an environment of fragmented local jurisdictions, not within the framework of the territorial state. In this short paper we attempt to sketch a unifying approach towards the interpretation of the emergence of these institutions. We argue that communal responsibility in medieval city-states created incentives for excessive risk-taking by individual merchants, and that the emergence of firms mitigated this problem. We also find that entity shielding in the sense of Hansmann, Kraakman, and Squire [2006] arose endogenously and is not primarily the result of reg...
We develop a theory of the emergence of merchant guilds as an efficient mechanism to foster cooperat...
Communal responsibility, a medieval institution studied by Greif (2006), supported the use of credit...
Modern advocates of corporate self-regulation have drawn unlikely inspiration from the Middle Ages. ...
Economic institutions encompassing increasingly sophisticated concepts of risk-sharing and liability...
Economic institutions encompassing increasingly sophisticated concepts of risksharing and liability ...
The present article investigates how the custom of limiting the responsibility of the partners arose...
This paper utilizes historical evidence and game theory to examine institutions that fostered interc...
June 12, 1997 Existing works on the economic implications of social structures examined the effect o...
This paper integrates a historical institutional analysis of the emergence and tran-sition of variou...
This article reviews the history literature on the Champagne fairs and argues that their unique succ...
Cahier de recherche CERAG - UMR 5820 - CNRS n° 2006-10, 19 pagesThis paper interprets historical stu...
Cahier de recherche CERAG - UMR 5820 - CNRS n° 2006-10, 19 pagesThis paper interprets historical stu...
We build a model to investigate the interaction between trade, the supply of law and order, and the ...
Urban development was a key phenomenon in medieval Western Europe. This paper focuses on the relatio...
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...
Communal responsibility, a medieval institution studied by Greif (2006), supported the use of credit...
Modern advocates of corporate self-regulation have drawn unlikely inspiration from the Middle Ages. ...
Economic institutions encompassing increasingly sophisticated concepts of risk-sharing and liability...
Economic institutions encompassing increasingly sophisticated concepts of risksharing and liability ...
The present article investigates how the custom of limiting the responsibility of the partners arose...
This paper utilizes historical evidence and game theory to examine institutions that fostered interc...
June 12, 1997 Existing works on the economic implications of social structures examined the effect o...
This paper integrates a historical institutional analysis of the emergence and tran-sition of variou...
This article reviews the history literature on the Champagne fairs and argues that their unique succ...
Cahier de recherche CERAG - UMR 5820 - CNRS n° 2006-10, 19 pagesThis paper interprets historical stu...
Cahier de recherche CERAG - UMR 5820 - CNRS n° 2006-10, 19 pagesThis paper interprets historical stu...
We build a model to investigate the interaction between trade, the supply of law and order, and the ...
Urban development was a key phenomenon in medieval Western Europe. This paper focuses on the relatio...
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...
Communal responsibility, a medieval institution studied by Greif (2006), supported the use of credit...
Modern advocates of corporate self-regulation have drawn unlikely inspiration from the Middle Ages. ...