Extant explanations of the nature and scope of firms, such as transaction costs, property rights, metering and resources can be integrated into a more general (capability-based) theory of the nature and essence of the firm that recognizes the importance to the firm of creating (and capturing) value from innovation. We note that the appropriability of returns from creative and innovative activity often requires the entrepreneurial creation and co-creation of markets. Accordingly, market failure and transaction costs approaches need to be revamped to capture the essence of entrepreneurial and managerial activity that extends beyond the mere exercise of authority. We suggest that the nature and objective of the firm in an economy with innovati...
The entity-firm approach calls for a dramatic change in business finance theory. In order to offer s...
A central role of the entrepreneur-manager is assembling a strategic bundle of complementary assets ...
We describe new ideas as incomplete concepts for which the innovator needs feedback from agents with...
Extant explanations of the nature and scope of firms, such as transaction costs, property rights, me...
none1noThe paper aims at flagging some new insights the innovation literature has recently offered t...
This paper maintains that joining property rights theory and Austrian economics informs the dynamic ...
The entrepreneurial theory of the firm argues that entrepreneurship, properly understood, is a cruci...
Most of the standard economic analyses of the firm utilize only the capital (including the human one...
This is an early draft. Please do not quote or cite without written permission of the authors. Comme...
This article outlines a capabilities-enriched economic theory of the firm and its sources of competi...
Contrary to well-known theories regarding the firm as a “black box”, or a nexus of contracts, or wha...
In a recent article in European Management Review, Pitelis and Teece (2009) argue that extant explan...
The firm, its tasks and the way in which it relates to the market appear in a different light with r...
Most of the standard economic analyses of the firm utilize only the capital (including the human one...
What is a firm? What are the main driving forces that explain the trade-off between make-or buy deci...
The entity-firm approach calls for a dramatic change in business finance theory. In order to offer s...
A central role of the entrepreneur-manager is assembling a strategic bundle of complementary assets ...
We describe new ideas as incomplete concepts for which the innovator needs feedback from agents with...
Extant explanations of the nature and scope of firms, such as transaction costs, property rights, me...
none1noThe paper aims at flagging some new insights the innovation literature has recently offered t...
This paper maintains that joining property rights theory and Austrian economics informs the dynamic ...
The entrepreneurial theory of the firm argues that entrepreneurship, properly understood, is a cruci...
Most of the standard economic analyses of the firm utilize only the capital (including the human one...
This is an early draft. Please do not quote or cite without written permission of the authors. Comme...
This article outlines a capabilities-enriched economic theory of the firm and its sources of competi...
Contrary to well-known theories regarding the firm as a “black box”, or a nexus of contracts, or wha...
In a recent article in European Management Review, Pitelis and Teece (2009) argue that extant explan...
The firm, its tasks and the way in which it relates to the market appear in a different light with r...
Most of the standard economic analyses of the firm utilize only the capital (including the human one...
What is a firm? What are the main driving forces that explain the trade-off between make-or buy deci...
The entity-firm approach calls for a dramatic change in business finance theory. In order to offer s...
A central role of the entrepreneur-manager is assembling a strategic bundle of complementary assets ...
We describe new ideas as incomplete concepts for which the innovator needs feedback from agents with...