The organizing work is a prerequisite for any collective action, but it must be undertaken with a fear of being 'held - up' due to its relation-specific and non-verifiable nature. If compensation for that work is not assured, the incentive for that work is lost. By examining a three-stage game model to illustrate the whole process of providing a collective good, I derive the results (i) that the possibility of collective action depends on whether or not political entrepreneurs can solve the 'hold-up' problem with leadership for collective action, and (ii) that a group optimality can be attained under the leadership of a financially-independent type of political entrepreneur under the condition of costless re-negotiation
A typical argument in Marxist and radical writings on economic organization is that prevailing pract...
The provision of public goods is an important problem in economics and the social sciences. It is of...
We extend the model of collective action in which groups compete for a budged by endogenizing the gr...
The organizing work is a prerequisite for any collective action, but it must be undertaken with a fe...
We consider a dynamic process of coalition formation in which a principal bargains sequentially with...
The "by-product theory" of collective action is re-examined by taking into consideration the indispe...
The problem of collective action is usually identified with social dilemmas. A wider notion of the t...
The problem of collective action is usually identified with social dilemmas. A wider notion of the t...
Collective action is critical for successful market formation. However, relatively little is known a...
In the first chapter, we extend the results of the Coase theorem to the relationships where, due to ...
The government and a non-governmental organization (NGO) can invest in the provision of a public goo...
This article aims to use a bargaining power model to reduce moral hazard—in the form of entrepreneur...
This paper studies optimal allocation of control rights in collective organizations where members ar...
Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/45508/1/11127_2005_Article_BF01718501.p...
Egalitarianism and meritocracy are competing principles to distribute the joint benefits of cooperat...
A typical argument in Marxist and radical writings on economic organization is that prevailing pract...
The provision of public goods is an important problem in economics and the social sciences. It is of...
We extend the model of collective action in which groups compete for a budged by endogenizing the gr...
The organizing work is a prerequisite for any collective action, but it must be undertaken with a fe...
We consider a dynamic process of coalition formation in which a principal bargains sequentially with...
The "by-product theory" of collective action is re-examined by taking into consideration the indispe...
The problem of collective action is usually identified with social dilemmas. A wider notion of the t...
The problem of collective action is usually identified with social dilemmas. A wider notion of the t...
Collective action is critical for successful market formation. However, relatively little is known a...
In the first chapter, we extend the results of the Coase theorem to the relationships where, due to ...
The government and a non-governmental organization (NGO) can invest in the provision of a public goo...
This article aims to use a bargaining power model to reduce moral hazard—in the form of entrepreneur...
This paper studies optimal allocation of control rights in collective organizations where members ar...
Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/45508/1/11127_2005_Article_BF01718501.p...
Egalitarianism and meritocracy are competing principles to distribute the joint benefits of cooperat...
A typical argument in Marxist and radical writings on economic organization is that prevailing pract...
The provision of public goods is an important problem in economics and the social sciences. It is of...
We extend the model of collective action in which groups compete for a budged by endogenizing the gr...