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Economics of Organization Chapter 2: Transaction Costs Theory

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Title: Economics of Organization Chapter 2: Transaction Costs Theory


1
Economics of Organization Chapter 2
Transaction Costs Theory
  • Joe Mahoney
  • University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign

2
Transaction Costs Theory
  • Arrow (1974) The Limits of Organization
  • Coase (1988) The Firm, the Market and the Law
  • Williamson (1975) Markets and Hierarchies
  • Williamson (1985)
    The Economic Institutions of
    Capitalism
  • Williamson (1996)
  • The Mechanisms of Governance

3
Arrow (1974) The
Limits of Organization
  • If I am not for myself then who is for me? And
    if I am not for others, then who am I? And if
    not now, when?
  • There is a tension we all feel between the claims
    of individual self-fulfillment and those of
    social conscience and action.

4
Arrow (1974) The
Limits of Organization
  • There are profound (economic and ethical)
    difficulties with the price system.
  • Valuable though it is in certain realms, the
    price system cannot be made the complete arbiter
    of social life.
  • The price system does not, in any way,
    prescribe a just distribution of income.

5
Arrow (1974) The
Limits of Organization
  • Organizations are means of achieving the benefits
    of collective action in situations where there
    are severe market frictions
  • Uncertainty and the inability to insure some
    risks
  • Moral hazard (hidden action)
  • Ex post opportunistic behavior
  • Adverse selection (hidden information)
  • Ex ante opportunistic behavior
  • Idiosyncratic assets

6
Coase (1988) The
Firm, the Market and the Law
  • In the absence of transaction costs, markets and
    hierarchies would be equivalent in terms of
    allocative efficiency (Coase, 1937).
  • In the absence of transaction costs, liability
    rules would be equivalent in terms of allocative
    efficiency (Coase, 1960).
  • In a world of positive transaction costs, the
    choice of markets and hierarchies (and the choice
    of liability rules) matter for efficiency.

7
Williamson (1975)
Markets and Hierarchies
  • A systematic study of market frictions
  • Incomplete markets due to uncertainty
  • Insurance problems
  • Employment relations
  • Vertical integration
  • Capital markets
  • Increasing returns and sunk costs
  • Indivisibilities
  • Information asymmetries
  • Public goods
  • Lack of definition of property rights
  • Externalities with positive transaction costs

8
Williamson (1975)
Markets and Hierarchies
  • A comparative assessment of the economic
    efficiency of alternative governance modes
  • Organizational boundary issues are approached in
    an interdisciplinary way where law, property
    rights theory, business history, and organization
    theory are usefully brought together and
  • The theory is applied to product markets, labor
    markets, capital markets and value- chain
    analysis.

9
Williamson (1975)
Markets and Hierarchies
  • Following Coase (1937) and Simon (1947),
    hierarchy usually implies a superior-subordinate
    relationship
  • The employment relationship is commonly
    associated with voluntary subordination.
  • The benefits and costs of the firm (e.g.,
    vertical integration) are well articulated.

10
Williamson (1975)
Markets and Hierarchies
  • Due to uncertainty and bounded rationality,
    contracts are necessarily incomplete.
  • Incomplete contracts are a problem when some
    people act with opportunistic behavior and there
    is small-numbers bargaining in the presence of
    asset specificity, which can lead to a hold-up
    problem.

11
Williamson (1975)
Markets and Hierarchies
  • Benefits of Vertical Integration
  • Eliminates preemptive claims on profits between
    separate firms
  • Cooperation can be achieved better in an adaptive
    sequential manner with more refined rewards
  • Internal auditing has superior features to
    external auditing (e.g., railroad cartels) and
  • More likely to achieve convergent expectations
    within the firm via the development of a coding
    system within the firm.

12
Williamson (1975)
Markets and Hierarchies
  • Costs of Vertical Integration
  • Internal Procurement Bias
  • A norm of reciprocity easily develops
  • Internal Expansion Bias and Persistence
  • Partly a mechanism for reducing conflicts
  • Communication Distortion
  • Serial reproduction loss (a bounded rationality
    problem)
  • Deliberate distortion (an opportunism problem)

13
Williamson (1975)
Markets and Hierarchies
  • Multi-divisional Organization

14
Williamson (1975)
Markets and Hierarchies
  • Multi-divisional Organization
  • Responsibilities for operating divisions are
    assigned to (essentially self-contained)
    operating units
  • The general office is mainly concerned with
    strategic decisions, rather than tactical
    decisions
  • Divisions are monitored and economic incentives
    are provided
  • Cash flow is allocated to high-yield uses.

15
Williamson (1985) Economic Institutions of
Capitalism
  • More precisely identifies asset specificity as
    the key concept for potential contractual
    hazards
  • Asset specificity implies small-numbers, but
  • Small-numbers does not imply asset specificity
    (e.g., a contestable market).
  • Emphasizes the concept of fundamental
    transformation.

16
Williamson (1985) Economic Institutions of
Capitalism
  • Site Specificity E.g., the co-location of an
    electric plant and a coal mine
  • Physical Asset Specificity E.g., specialized
    tools
  • Human Capital Specificity E.g., firm-specific
    knowledge

17
Williamson (1985) Economic Institutions of
Capitalism
  • Economic hostages involve asset specificity
  • They are an important component of self-enforcing
    agreements
  • They have both ex ante (screening) and ex post
    (bonding) effects and
  • The wise manager should both give and receive
    credible commitments.
  • Key Idea MUTUAL sunk cost commitment

18
Williamson (1996) The
Mechanisms of Governance
  • Remediableness Criterion
  • Relevant comparisons are with feasible
    alternatives all of which are flawed.
  • Claims of (path dependency arguments of)
    inefficiency (Arthur, 1994) that can be
    recognized only after the fact and/or cannot be
    implemented with net gains have no operational
    importance.

19
Williamson (1996) The
Mechanisms of Governance
  • Discrete Structural Alternatives
  • Firms employ different means than markets employ
  • Discrete contract law differences serve to define
    each generic form of governance and
  • The implicit contract law of internal
    organization is forbearance.
  • Hierarchy is its own court of ultimate appeal.

20
Williamson (1996) The
Mechanisms of Governance
  • Calculative trust is a contradiction in terms
  • To craft credible commitments (through the use of
    economic bonds, economic hostages, information
    disclosure rules, specialized dispute settlement
    mechanisms) is to create functional substitutes
    for trust.
  • It is redundant at best and can be misleading to
    use the term trust to describe commercial
    exchange for which investments in mutual
    economic hostages have been made.
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