Coase theorem. Asserts that if transaction costs are nil and if property rights (i.e. rights to pollute or to be protected from pollution) are clearly defined and allocated, then agents will exchange that right and the result (the level of pollution) will be optimal and independent from the initial allocation of rights. It opposes standard welfare economics, in which pollution is viewed as an obstacle to the efficiency of markets, since it has no price (it is an “externality”).This proposition was named “Coase Theorem” by Stigler (1966), after Ronald Coase’s “The Problem of Social Cost” (1960). In that article, Coase illustrated it, but provided no general statement nor demonstration; and above all he insisted on the importance of transacti...
Debt-for-nature swaps have emerged as one method for debt burdened nations to retire their foreign d...
Coase-Stiglera’s theorem is important for development of the economic theory until the property righ...
The “iteration argument” presented in Schlicht (1996) shows that the allocation of property rights m...
Coase theorem. Asserts that if transaction costs are nil and if property rights (i.e. rights to poll...
This project explores methods of reducing the social cost of air pollution by examining the transact...
The Coase Theorem has a central place in the theory of environmental economics and regulation. Its a...
SOME years ago, in a paper entitled The Problem of Social Cost, Professor Ronald Coase asserted an...
Professor Ronald Coase published only a few articles during his career, but he was awarded the Nobel...
The Coase Theorem, so coined by George Stigler in 1966, based on Ronald H. Coase's oft-quoted 1960 a...
This paper explores the extent to which ex ante transaction costs may lead to failures of the Coase ...
The Coase theorem states that in the world of zero transaction costs, utilization of resources will ...
In law as well as economics, the most well-known aspect of Coase\u27s The Problem of Social Cost, ...
In his pioneering work on transaction costs, Ronald Coase presupposed a picture of property as a bun...
In The Problem of Social Cost Ronald Coase was highly critical of the work of Cambridge University...
International audienceIn “The problem of social cost” (1960), Ronald H. Coase argued that what are e...
Debt-for-nature swaps have emerged as one method for debt burdened nations to retire their foreign d...
Coase-Stiglera’s theorem is important for development of the economic theory until the property righ...
The “iteration argument” presented in Schlicht (1996) shows that the allocation of property rights m...
Coase theorem. Asserts that if transaction costs are nil and if property rights (i.e. rights to poll...
This project explores methods of reducing the social cost of air pollution by examining the transact...
The Coase Theorem has a central place in the theory of environmental economics and regulation. Its a...
SOME years ago, in a paper entitled The Problem of Social Cost, Professor Ronald Coase asserted an...
Professor Ronald Coase published only a few articles during his career, but he was awarded the Nobel...
The Coase Theorem, so coined by George Stigler in 1966, based on Ronald H. Coase's oft-quoted 1960 a...
This paper explores the extent to which ex ante transaction costs may lead to failures of the Coase ...
The Coase theorem states that in the world of zero transaction costs, utilization of resources will ...
In law as well as economics, the most well-known aspect of Coase\u27s The Problem of Social Cost, ...
In his pioneering work on transaction costs, Ronald Coase presupposed a picture of property as a bun...
In The Problem of Social Cost Ronald Coase was highly critical of the work of Cambridge University...
International audienceIn “The problem of social cost” (1960), Ronald H. Coase argued that what are e...
Debt-for-nature swaps have emerged as one method for debt burdened nations to retire their foreign d...
Coase-Stiglera’s theorem is important for development of the economic theory until the property righ...
The “iteration argument” presented in Schlicht (1996) shows that the allocation of property rights m...