We construct a model in which a first mover decides on its location before it knows the identity of the second mover; joint location results in a negative extemality. Contracts are inherently incomplete since the first mover's initial decision cannot be specified. We analyze several kinds of rights, including damages, injunctions, and rights to exclude (arising from covenants or land ownership). There are cases in which allocating any of these basic rights to the first mover-i.e., first-party rights-is dominated by second-party rights, and cases in which the reverse is true. A Coasian result (efficiency regardless of the rights allocation) only holds under a limited set of conditions. As corollaries of a theorem ranking the basic rights reg...
I develop a social choice approach to analyzing the endogenous assignment of individual rights. The ...
This paper explores the extent to which the incompleteness of contracts can be attributed to their f...
This paper explores the extent to which the incompleteness of contracts can be attributed to their f...
We construct a model in which a first mover decides on its location before it knows the identity of ...
We construct a model in which an investment opportunity arises for a first mover before it knows the...
The 1986 article by Grossman and Hart "A Theory of Vertical and Lateral Integration" has provided a ...
In theory, property rights allow markets to achieve Pareto optimal allocations. But the literature o...
This paper extends the framework provided by the so-called GHM approach to a context of endogenous o...
This paper surveys what can be learned from recent advances in the in-complete contract literature t...
The Coasean theory of the firm (Coase in Economica 4:386–405, 1937) has flourished with the theory o...
This paper has, then, two major themes. In the first part I hope to elucidate the relationship of po...
Building on recent work of Pitchford and Snyder (PS, 2003), this article models effects of alternati...
The Coasean theory of the firm (Coase in Econometrica 4:386–405, 9 1937) has flourished with the th...
This paper offers an explanation of rationally incomplete contracts where incompleteness refers to u...
This paper addresses the fundamental methodological issue of when courts should intervene in incompl...
I develop a social choice approach to analyzing the endogenous assignment of individual rights. The ...
This paper explores the extent to which the incompleteness of contracts can be attributed to their f...
This paper explores the extent to which the incompleteness of contracts can be attributed to their f...
We construct a model in which a first mover decides on its location before it knows the identity of ...
We construct a model in which an investment opportunity arises for a first mover before it knows the...
The 1986 article by Grossman and Hart "A Theory of Vertical and Lateral Integration" has provided a ...
In theory, property rights allow markets to achieve Pareto optimal allocations. But the literature o...
This paper extends the framework provided by the so-called GHM approach to a context of endogenous o...
This paper surveys what can be learned from recent advances in the in-complete contract literature t...
The Coasean theory of the firm (Coase in Economica 4:386–405, 1937) has flourished with the theory o...
This paper has, then, two major themes. In the first part I hope to elucidate the relationship of po...
Building on recent work of Pitchford and Snyder (PS, 2003), this article models effects of alternati...
The Coasean theory of the firm (Coase in Econometrica 4:386–405, 9 1937) has flourished with the th...
This paper offers an explanation of rationally incomplete contracts where incompleteness refers to u...
This paper addresses the fundamental methodological issue of when courts should intervene in incompl...
I develop a social choice approach to analyzing the endogenous assignment of individual rights. The ...
This paper explores the extent to which the incompleteness of contracts can be attributed to their f...
This paper explores the extent to which the incompleteness of contracts can be attributed to their f...