Standard economic models of contract imply that contracts should be highly complex, by which we mean (1) rich in the expected number of payoff-relevant contingencies; (2) variable in the magnitude of payoffs contracted to flow between parties; and (3) severe in the cognitive load necessary to understand the contract. Yet most realworld contracts are simple along all three of these dimensions. We argue that many factors, often neglected in the literature, account for this discrepancy. The factors are categorized as asymmetric information, monitoring dynamics, evolutionary pressures, conventions, reliance on trust and reputation, enforcement costs, bounded rationality, and renegotiation. This positive analysis has normative implications for...
Hart & Moore (1999) construct a model to show that contracts perform poorly in complex environments ...
I augment transaction cost economics and the learning to contract perspective by outlining the effec...
Complexity and uncertainty define our world, now more than ever. Scholars and practitioners have cel...
Standard economic models of contract imply that contracts should be highly complex, by which we me...
We offer a new perspective on measuring the complexity of interfirm contracts. We define complex con...
A contract is much more complex than its individual terms would suggest. Yet contract scholars have ...
Modern commercial contracts—those governing mergers and acquisitions and financial derivatives, for ...
For the past 100 years or so the historical trend in the law of contracts has been to water down for...
In most of the contract theory literature, contracting costs are assumed either to be high enough to...
Law and economics has failed to produce plausible descriptive theories of contract doctrines. This p...
A recent movement in contracts scholarship-the so-called New Formalism-seeks to justify limitations ...
It is well known that contract incompleteness can arise from the impossibility of planning for all f...
Economic theory suggests that, in most circumstances, market forces will ensure that standard form c...
The vertical organization of production entails a range of make-or-buy decisions of intermediate goo...
Contract interpretation aims primarily at ascertaining the common intention of parties. But parties ...
Hart & Moore (1999) construct a model to show that contracts perform poorly in complex environments ...
I augment transaction cost economics and the learning to contract perspective by outlining the effec...
Complexity and uncertainty define our world, now more than ever. Scholars and practitioners have cel...
Standard economic models of contract imply that contracts should be highly complex, by which we me...
We offer a new perspective on measuring the complexity of interfirm contracts. We define complex con...
A contract is much more complex than its individual terms would suggest. Yet contract scholars have ...
Modern commercial contracts—those governing mergers and acquisitions and financial derivatives, for ...
For the past 100 years or so the historical trend in the law of contracts has been to water down for...
In most of the contract theory literature, contracting costs are assumed either to be high enough to...
Law and economics has failed to produce plausible descriptive theories of contract doctrines. This p...
A recent movement in contracts scholarship-the so-called New Formalism-seeks to justify limitations ...
It is well known that contract incompleteness can arise from the impossibility of planning for all f...
Economic theory suggests that, in most circumstances, market forces will ensure that standard form c...
The vertical organization of production entails a range of make-or-buy decisions of intermediate goo...
Contract interpretation aims primarily at ascertaining the common intention of parties. But parties ...
Hart & Moore (1999) construct a model to show that contracts perform poorly in complex environments ...
I augment transaction cost economics and the learning to contract perspective by outlining the effec...
Complexity and uncertainty define our world, now more than ever. Scholars and practitioners have cel...