In several contract situations, parties exchange promises of future performance, creating reciprocal obligations. In this paper, we extend the standard models of contract remedies to consider the incentives created by contracts where both parties provide only executory consideration and where the parties’ obligations are yet to be performed. We show that the legal remedies that govern these contracts provide valuable enforcement mechanisms that are not available when parties enter into a contract where they exchange a promise for an actual performance. We show that when the values of the parties’ performances are interdependent, contracts with executory consideration create effort incentives that are superior to the incentives of contracts ...
The title of this article is suggested by an article written by the late Dean Finn, then Professor F...
We study a contracting model with unforeseen contingencies in which the court is an active player. E...
In this paper we explore theoretically the relationship between explicit and implicit/relational con...
In several contract situations, parties exchange promises of future performance, creating reciprocal...
A party dissatisfied with the contractual performance of a counterparty is typically able to pursue ...
Parties often exchange promises of future performance with one another. Legal systems frame and regu...
This paper examines the efficiency of expectation damages as a breach remedy in a bilateral trade se...
A mathematical characterization of self-enforcing bilateral contracts is given. Contracts where both...
Parties often exchange promises of future performance with one another. Legal systems frame and regu...
Parties often exchange promises of future performance with one another. Legal systems frame and regu...
This paper explores implications of interactions between noncontractibility of quality, multidimensi...
We find an economic rationale for the common sense answer to the question in our title — courts shou...
This article explores the canonical contracting problem in a general set up of bilateral "selfish" r...
The purpose of this essay is to begin the development of an integrated theory of contract remedies b...
We consider a double-sided moral hazard problem where each party can renege on the signed contract s...
The title of this article is suggested by an article written by the late Dean Finn, then Professor F...
We study a contracting model with unforeseen contingencies in which the court is an active player. E...
In this paper we explore theoretically the relationship between explicit and implicit/relational con...
In several contract situations, parties exchange promises of future performance, creating reciprocal...
A party dissatisfied with the contractual performance of a counterparty is typically able to pursue ...
Parties often exchange promises of future performance with one another. Legal systems frame and regu...
This paper examines the efficiency of expectation damages as a breach remedy in a bilateral trade se...
A mathematical characterization of self-enforcing bilateral contracts is given. Contracts where both...
Parties often exchange promises of future performance with one another. Legal systems frame and regu...
Parties often exchange promises of future performance with one another. Legal systems frame and regu...
This paper explores implications of interactions between noncontractibility of quality, multidimensi...
We find an economic rationale for the common sense answer to the question in our title — courts shou...
This article explores the canonical contracting problem in a general set up of bilateral "selfish" r...
The purpose of this essay is to begin the development of an integrated theory of contract remedies b...
We consider a double-sided moral hazard problem where each party can renege on the signed contract s...
The title of this article is suggested by an article written by the late Dean Finn, then Professor F...
We study a contracting model with unforeseen contingencies in which the court is an active player. E...
In this paper we explore theoretically the relationship between explicit and implicit/relational con...