If contracting within the firm is incomplete, managers will expend resources on trying to appropriate a share of the surplus that is generated. We show that outside ownership may alleviate the deadweight losses associated with such costly distributional conflict, even if all it does is add another level of conflict. In case managers have to be provided with incentives to make firm-specific investments, there is a tradeoff between minimizing conflict costs and maximizing output. This suggests, among other things, an explanation of why some firms are organized as partnerships and others as stock corporations
The Coasean theory of the firm (Coase in Economica 4:386–405, 1937) has flourished with the theory o...
Theories explaining the equity ownership structure of inter-firm relationships, such as the resource...
This paper analyses how a firm chooses between direct ownership and licensing or franchising contrac...
If contracting within the firm is incomplete, managers will expend resources on trying to appropriat...
Ownership may not always be the best driver for investment incentives in an incomplete contract cont...
This article provides two application of incomplete contract theory to real life problems. In the pr...
This paper examines the property rights theory of the firm when a manager's relationship-specific in...
The literature on agency costs has established that the introduction of outside equity results in co...
Political Economy 691–19.) made the study of firm boundaries susceptible to formal economic analysis...
In the first chapter, we extend the results of the Coase theorem to the relationships where, due to ...
It is widely accepted that only the protection of private property rights and competition by rival f...
The paper asserts that introducing endogenous outside options in the standard incomplete contract fr...
I develop and test a new theory of corporate political strategy and behavior based upon ownership st...
International audienceThis paper provides a theory for the choice of an organizational structure by ...
Strategic alliances are long-term contracts between legally distinct organizations that provide for ...
The Coasean theory of the firm (Coase in Economica 4:386–405, 1937) has flourished with the theory o...
Theories explaining the equity ownership structure of inter-firm relationships, such as the resource...
This paper analyses how a firm chooses between direct ownership and licensing or franchising contrac...
If contracting within the firm is incomplete, managers will expend resources on trying to appropriat...
Ownership may not always be the best driver for investment incentives in an incomplete contract cont...
This article provides two application of incomplete contract theory to real life problems. In the pr...
This paper examines the property rights theory of the firm when a manager's relationship-specific in...
The literature on agency costs has established that the introduction of outside equity results in co...
Political Economy 691–19.) made the study of firm boundaries susceptible to formal economic analysis...
In the first chapter, we extend the results of the Coase theorem to the relationships where, due to ...
It is widely accepted that only the protection of private property rights and competition by rival f...
The paper asserts that introducing endogenous outside options in the standard incomplete contract fr...
I develop and test a new theory of corporate political strategy and behavior based upon ownership st...
International audienceThis paper provides a theory for the choice of an organizational structure by ...
Strategic alliances are long-term contracts between legally distinct organizations that provide for ...
The Coasean theory of the firm (Coase in Economica 4:386–405, 1937) has flourished with the theory o...
Theories explaining the equity ownership structure of inter-firm relationships, such as the resource...
This paper analyses how a firm chooses between direct ownership and licensing or franchising contrac...