Professional service providers who wish to organize as multi-person firms have historically been limited to the partnership form. Such organizational forms trade the benefit of risk diversification off against the costs of diluted incentives and liability exposure in choosing their optimal size. More recently, states have permitted limited-liability entities that combine the simplicity, flexibility and tax advantages of a partnership with the liability shield of a corporation. We develop a game theoretic model of professional-firm organization that integrates the provision of incentives in a multi-person firm with the choice of business form. We then test the model\u27s predictions with a new longitudinal data set on American law firms. Con...
This article develops a more refined transaction-cost based theory which explains: why rational inve...
Although many states have embraced the concept of limited liability for attorneys, approval is not u...
This Article provides the first detailed empirical analysis of firms\u27 choice of organizational fo...
Professional service providers who wish to organize as multi-person firms have historically been lim...
In a recent issue of this Journal, Carr and Mathewson (1988) test a model of the impact of limited a...
Since the rapid rise in organizational forms for business associations, academics and practitioners ...
In this Article, the author analyzes the reactions of 147 New York City law firms to the 1994 enactm...
The goal of this Article is to examine the partnership model and advocate for a change in the Model ...
This article addresses the overlooked negative consequences of law firms transitioning from a tradit...
This article addresses the overlooked negative consequences of law firms transitioning from a tradit...
In the law of business organizations, individuals have generally been unrestrained in choosing which...
Limited liability is a fundamental principle of corporate law. Yet liability has never been absolute...
This Article suggests that the partnership form is attractive for many firms on the margin only beca...
In 1991, Galanter and Palay published \u27Tournament of Lawyers: The Transformation of the Big Law...
In this study, we analyze the firm’s choice of legal form of organization (“LFO”). We find that only...
This article develops a more refined transaction-cost based theory which explains: why rational inve...
Although many states have embraced the concept of limited liability for attorneys, approval is not u...
This Article provides the first detailed empirical analysis of firms\u27 choice of organizational fo...
Professional service providers who wish to organize as multi-person firms have historically been lim...
In a recent issue of this Journal, Carr and Mathewson (1988) test a model of the impact of limited a...
Since the rapid rise in organizational forms for business associations, academics and practitioners ...
In this Article, the author analyzes the reactions of 147 New York City law firms to the 1994 enactm...
The goal of this Article is to examine the partnership model and advocate for a change in the Model ...
This article addresses the overlooked negative consequences of law firms transitioning from a tradit...
This article addresses the overlooked negative consequences of law firms transitioning from a tradit...
In the law of business organizations, individuals have generally been unrestrained in choosing which...
Limited liability is a fundamental principle of corporate law. Yet liability has never been absolute...
This Article suggests that the partnership form is attractive for many firms on the margin only beca...
In 1991, Galanter and Palay published \u27Tournament of Lawyers: The Transformation of the Big Law...
In this study, we analyze the firm’s choice of legal form of organization (“LFO”). We find that only...
This article develops a more refined transaction-cost based theory which explains: why rational inve...
Although many states have embraced the concept of limited liability for attorneys, approval is not u...
This Article provides the first detailed empirical analysis of firms\u27 choice of organizational fo...