Recent work in the field of mechanism design has led some researchers to propose institutional changes that would permit parties to enter into nonmodifiable contracts, which is not possible under current contract law. This article demonstrates that it may well be socially desirable not to enforce contractual terms that explicitly prevent renegotiation, even if rational and symmetrically informed parties have deliberately signed such a contract. The impossibility to prevent renegotiation can constrain the principal's abilities to introduce distortions in order to reduce the agent's rent, so that the first-best benchmark solution will more often be attained. Copyright 2005, Oxford University Press.
This paper develops a theoretical framework for studying contract and enforcement in setting of comp...
We find an economic rationale for the common sense answer to the question in our title - courts (tha...
In most of the contract theory literature, contracting costs are assumed either to be high enough to...
We study a contract design setting in which the contracting parties cannot commit not to renegotiate...
The paper analyzes contracts as means of strategic commitment, that is, commitment against outside p...
Watson (2002) proposes non-forcing contracts as a way to show the limitations of the mechanism desig...
It has been emphasized that when contracts are incomplete (e.g., because some relevant variables are...
Two parties may agree to a mutually binding contract that will govern their behavior after an uncert...
In the economy, contract formation and recontracting are costly, and these costs have important impl...
Professor Dr. Klaus Berger, in Renegotiation and Adaptation of International Investment Contracts: T...
International audienceThis chapter reflects the double-sided view of the economic literature on cont...
The common law practice of refusing to enforce contractual penalties has long mystified law and econ...
We study contracting and costly renegotiation in settings of complete, but unverifiable information,...
The purpose of this paper is to show that the determination of what is enforceable in a given societ...
This paper studies moral hazard contracts that may be renegotiated after an agent chooses an unobser...
This paper develops a theoretical framework for studying contract and enforcement in setting of comp...
We find an economic rationale for the common sense answer to the question in our title - courts (tha...
In most of the contract theory literature, contracting costs are assumed either to be high enough to...
We study a contract design setting in which the contracting parties cannot commit not to renegotiate...
The paper analyzes contracts as means of strategic commitment, that is, commitment against outside p...
Watson (2002) proposes non-forcing contracts as a way to show the limitations of the mechanism desig...
It has been emphasized that when contracts are incomplete (e.g., because some relevant variables are...
Two parties may agree to a mutually binding contract that will govern their behavior after an uncert...
In the economy, contract formation and recontracting are costly, and these costs have important impl...
Professor Dr. Klaus Berger, in Renegotiation and Adaptation of International Investment Contracts: T...
International audienceThis chapter reflects the double-sided view of the economic literature on cont...
The common law practice of refusing to enforce contractual penalties has long mystified law and econ...
We study contracting and costly renegotiation in settings of complete, but unverifiable information,...
The purpose of this paper is to show that the determination of what is enforceable in a given societ...
This paper studies moral hazard contracts that may be renegotiated after an agent chooses an unobser...
This paper develops a theoretical framework for studying contract and enforcement in setting of comp...
We find an economic rationale for the common sense answer to the question in our title - courts (tha...
In most of the contract theory literature, contracting costs are assumed either to be high enough to...