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Specialization and Exchange

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Title: 2. Specialization and Exchange Author: Benito Arru ada Last modified by: Benito Arru ada Created Date: 1/22/2006 11:51:19 AM Document presentation format – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Specialization and Exchange


1
Specialization and Exchange
2
What is the economic problem in the Robinson
Crusoe story?
  • Before Friday comes in?
  • Optimization ? Robbins allocating scarce
    recourses what to produce, how, for whom?
  • After Friday comes in?
  • Hayek information transmission discovery
  • Coase transaction costs
  • Coordination
  • Motivation

3
On the nature of the economic problem
  • Reach specialization advantages (Smiths
    division of labor)
  • Comparative advantage ? higher productivity
  • Origin previous investment
  • Ambiguity of purpose e.g., mafia
  • Obstacle transaction (i.e., exchange) costs
  • Coordination ? information
  • Incentive alignment ? information asymmetry

4
Authors sequence
  • Smith
  • division of labor as source of growth
  • Hayek
  • role of information in the economic problem
  • Coase
  • transaction costs property rights
  • Fehr et al.
  • role of human nature

5
Production costs
  • Types of costs
  • Transformation cost
  • Exchange or transaction costs
  • Coordination
  • Motivation
  • Relevance
  • Lack of empirical content
  • Focus attention on different problems

6
Costs of production as a function of
specialization
7
(aside) Promises as objects of exchange ?
Information asymmetry ? cheatingHow to cope with
it?
  • Mistake to take as a default the sequence
    self-interest ? opportunism ? safeguarding
  • Need of a broader view instead
  • Safeguarding farsighted contracting à la
    Williamson
  • Screening types when previous commitment is
    viable
  • Providing cooperative starting points ? motivate
    employees to start cooperating
  • Educating to mold types, viable at least at
    social (including firm) level

8
Solutions to the economic problem
  • Custom (?)
  • suitable if no technical change?
  • Even hunter-gatherers had to decide on marriages,
    when to move, where to hunt, etc.
  • Politics
  • Markets

9
Solutions to the economic problem
  • Politics
  • Coercion
  • Centralization
  • Representative decisions by agents
  • Weighting of information according to voting
    rights
  • Markets
  • Voluntary
  • Decentralization
  • Direct decisions by owners
  • Weighting of information according to
    individuals participation in the market

10
Politics Markets
Decisions Type of economy Type of economy Type of economy
Decisions Market economies Social market economies Planned economies
What? Purchasing decisions Mixed according to sectors Politics
How? Competition amongst businesses A mix of competition and planning Central planning
For whom? Factors Markets Mix of market and political decisions Politics
11
A historical perspective on markets, politics and
development
Timing 19th century Since 2nd 3rd of 20th century Since 2nd 3rd of 20th century
Liberal State Social market economies Developing countries
Political systems Aristocratic democracy Mass democracy Diverse
Rights Negative rights property, freedom, expression, mobilityprotect citizens against themselves and, mainly, the State Mixed constraints of negative rights and promulgation of positive rights (housing, education, health, etc.) Emphasis on positive rights at a low level of (a) wealth and (b) institutional development
End results Institutional development (independent judiciary, competitive political market, civil education) Consensus Europe, 2000 etc. welfare state expanded or reduced only marginally (UK, Thatcher-Blair) Fear of expropriation Weimar, 1920s Spain, 1936 Chile, 1973 etc.Bolivia?
12
Market Price System Market institutions
  • Price system Microeconomic abstraction
  • Calculating machine ? allocation of resources
  • Information processing
  • Prices have nice properties as signals minimal,
    selective relevant information
  • Information has to be discovered
  • Market institutions, at least
  • Property rights, both allocation enforcement ?
    incentives
  • Law independent judiciary ? transaction costs

13
Combining markets politics
  • Political failures
  • Break b/w individual and social optimality
  • Use of violence
  • Inevitable agency
  • Public goods (e.g., poor weighting of info)
  • Monopolies (parties, barriers to entry)
  • Herding (e.g., formation of beliefs, emotional
    reactions)
  • Rationality (how do we take sides in politics?)
  • Market failures
  • Break b/w individual and social optimality
  • Externalities (pollution)
  • Public goods (army)
  • Monopolies (utility)
  • Herding (e.g., speculative bubble)
  • Rationality ? no even individual optimum
    (children)

14
Combining markets politics The Coase Theorem
  • If transaction costs are zero, initial allocation
    of rights does not affect
  • final allocation of resources or
  • production level
  • Example Noisy firm causes externality on
    neighbors
  • With positive transaction costs ? may affect both
    ? political decisions should focus on reducing
    transaction costs by
  • Clarifying allocation of property rights (who has
    right to what) and
  • Securing their enforcement (no expropriation)

15
Coase theorem example
Initial allocation of rights Profit for firm Loss for neigh-bors Firms decision Compen-sation, C Final allocation of rights
Neighbors 40 60 Closes to avoid paying compensation 60 gt 40 0 Neighbors
Firm 40 60 Closes because neighbors would compensate 40 lt Clt 60 Neighbors
Neighbors 60 40 Continues after compensating the neighbors 40 Firm
Firm 60 40 Continues 0 Firm
Costs and benefits in current values
Assuming that the legal system considers damages
as an upper limit of compensation
16
The Fable of the Bees
  • Pollination as an externality
  • Contracting bees for pollination
  • Visit http//www.beepollination.com/
  • We provide services to California. Almond 
     growers by locating strong, healthy  beehives 
     for almond pollination.
  • We also provide services to Beekeepers by
     locating suitable almond contracts for their
     particular bee business.
  • See a simple pollination agreement at
    http//edis.ifas.ufl.edu/AA169
  • The beekeeper shall supply the grower with
    _______ hives (colonies) of bees to be delivered
    to the (cucumber, watermelon field, etc.) as
    follows ....

17
Sources of transaction costs
  • Unclear allocation of property rights
  • Commons and anti-commons problems
  • Land titling why are mortgages impossible in
    most countries?
  • Number of parties ? Solution legal fictions
  • E.g. firms as nexus of contracts
  • Restrictions on trade
  • Wealth constraints
  • Endowment effect
  • Example few reallocating agreements after
    litigation
  • Biological rationale behind possessory instinct
  • Artificial
  • Licenses for taxis, pharmacies, musicians, TVs,
    etc.

18
The lighthouse in Economics
  • Public goods ? market underprovision
  • No rivalry b/w users
  • Impossible to exclude users
  • e.g., defense
  • See http//en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Public_good
  • Empirical evidence on lighthouses
  • Coase art. exclusion ? club good private
    building and operation of lighthouses
  • Marginal cost 0 ?
  • Inefficient if price gt 0?
  • Inefficient with respect to what? Need to
    compare real options

19
The tragedy of the commons
  • Unrestricted access to a resource leading to
    over-exploitation
  • Reason individual benefits, social costs
  • Examples fishing grounds, air pollution, road
    congestion, etc.
  • Solutions
  • exclusion (private or communal property) trade
  • regulation
  • Exercise
  • Visit www.perc.org on the interaction of
    politics and markets in solving environmental
    problems

20
Anticommons
  • Too many restrictions to access a resource leads
    to underutilization
  • Misleading analysis
  • The problem is not too many property rights but
  • High costs of gathering the consent of
    rightholders
  • The case of mortgages ?

21
Why are mortgages irrelevant in most countries?
( i.e., they hardly reduce default risk
interest rates)
  • Property right based on consent ?
  • Consent ? Enforcement
  • Survival of property right ? Transaction costs
  • Need institutions and organizations to reduce the
    cost of gathering consents Titling
  • Publicity rule priority of property rights on
    the basis of the date of publicity , not private
    contract
  • Public registers to facilitate information on
    rights
  • Works on this topic

22
Political failures
  • Preference transmission
  • voting paradox cyclical (i.e. not transitive)
    collective preferences, even if individual
    preferences are transitive
  • Arrows impossibility theorem
  • Preferences production
  • Market for ideas
  • Lack of competition
  • Herding
  • Also in markets

23
Needed empirical comparative analysis
  • Do not see neither the State nor the market as
    ideal solutions
  • Starting point use consistent assumptions about
    human beings in private public spheres
  • i.e., avoid this common mistake
  • Selfishness of market participants leads to
    market failure
  • Solution public regulation that often assumes .
    altruistic regulators and silly regulated
  • Markets and Politics not only failthey also
    interact
  • Can we use politics to get more efficient
    markets?
  • Can we use markets to get more efficient politics?

24
2008 Crisis
  • Market of political causes?
  • Mixed nature of financial markets
  • Monopoly of money
  • Role of central banks
  • Banker of last resort
  • Price fixing interest rate
  • Example in a bubble, interest kept too low
    (Spain, -3) ? How does this distort lending
    decisions?
  • Mortgage market
  • subprime lending partly mandated by law in the
    US, to the extent lenders had to grant of loans
    to people below average income
  • Everywhere, home buying was subsidized by
    Governments

25
Case on regulation Stores opening hours
  • Possible market failures
  • Externalities?
  • Monopoly?
  • Public goods?
  • Rationality?
  • Possible political failures
  • Preferences transmission?
  • Regulatory capture? Who benefits?
  • ???

26
Organization as solution to economic problem
The nature of the firm
  • Why do organizations (firms) exist?
  • Minimization of transaction costs
  • There are not market failures but business
    opportunitiese.g. Carmax
  • Other explanations do not explaine.g.,
    economies of scale can be contracted
  • example trucking intermediaries reach economies
    of scale and network, specially with respect to
    returns, but they contract in the market with
    owner-operator
  • But within-firm exchanges also suffer transaction
    costs ?

27
Transaction costs are present in both
organizations and markets
  • A familiar example
  • Babysitting by older child or by hired person ?
    different exchange (coordination and motivation)
    costs are present in each solution, but both are
    positive in both cases
  • Make or buy decisions in a firm

Performance and organizational choice For each
level of x, firms choose the organizational form
that optimizes performance. In principle, only
these optimal choices are observedfor instance,
vertically integrated units when x gt xo.
28
Firms as nexus of contracts
Manager Z
Government
Firm A
Individual X
Firm B
Individual M
Individual Y
29
Firms as nexus of contracts
  • Nexus, legal fiction ? Reduce cost of transacting
  • Contracts or hierarchies?
  • True Many contracts in the firm are relational ?
  • they define hierarchies ? resources allocated
    by command, not by agreement
  • But these contracts are voluntary, defining such
    hierarchical structures
  • Hierarchy ex ante voluntary allocation of
    rights asymmetrically to create a private legal
    order in which to complete enforce contracts ex
    post
  • Examples
  • labor contract
  • franchising

30
The nexus is not merely contractualSource
Arruñada, B., Foundation of Impersonal Exchange,
Univ. of Chicago Press, forthcoming. Example
The market for lemons
31
Contract b/w principal P agent A Ex ante Judicial decision Ex post
32
Contract b/w principal P agent A Ex ante Judicial decision Ex post
33
Contract b/w principal P agent A Ex ante Judicial decision Ex post
34
Originative contract b/w Er E Ex ante Subsequent contract b/w E B Judicial decision Ex post
Employee sells car to B
35
Originative contract b/w P A Ex ante Subsequent contract b/w A T Judicial decision Ex post
36
Originative contract b/w B1 O Ex ante Subsequent contract b/w O B2 Judicial decision Ex post
Double sale of land
37
Originative contract b/w LP GP Ex ante Subsequent contract b/w GP CC Judicial decision Ex post
Borrowing by a hidden LLP
38
Originative contract b/w P1 Pn M Ex ante Subsequent contract b/w M Pnj Judicial decision Ex post
Sale of new shares
39
Originative contract b/w P1 Pn M Ex ante Subsequent contract b/w M T Judicial decision Ex post
Representation
40
Problem
  • Secure property rights not enough
  • Growth requires investment
  • Secure rights enforcement ? property rule
    consent
  • Good allocation of resources
  • Transferable rights low transaction costs ?
    liability rule
  • Specialization ? delegation
  • Multiple rights many people on each asset
  • Property (real, in rem) rights good enforcement
    but high transaction costs if multiple rights

41
Solution Voluntary and verifiable dilution of
property rights
  • Contract rule protected by consent e.g.,
    Merchant Law
  • Ruling in favor of the uninformed party (the
    acquirer) makes the information asymmetry
    irrelevant
  • Property rule requiring publicity e.g., real
    property
  • Publicity makes the information asymmetry
    manageable
  • Registration makes the information asymmetry
    irrelevant
  • Preserving the role of consent keeps the
    enforcement advantage of property rights
  • Consent in choosing agent
  • Consent in property rule
  • Ensuring commitment and publicity by independent
    intervention ex ante. This
  • Avoids opportunistic choice of rules ex post by P
  • Obviates information asymmetry to T

42
Originative contract b/w P A Ex ante Subsequent contract b/w A T Judicial decision Ex post
43
Originative contract b/w P A Ex ante Subsequent contract b/w A T Judicial decision Ex post

Judges apply market-enabling contract rules when adjudicating subsequent contracts, protecting innocent third parties
44
Originative contract b/w P A Ex ante Subsequent contract b/w A T Judicial decision Ex post

Automatic contract publicity OR Formalized publicity Market-enabling rules used when adjudicating the subsequent contract
45
Objectives of the firm
  • Individuals have objectivesfirms do not
  • Firms (as well as markets) just behave as a
    consequence of individual decisions pursuing
    these objectives
  • They reach equilibriums, more like markets than
    individuals
  • Profit maximization
  • Also an abstraction, an analytical tool
  • Profit maximization as a competitive constraint,
    not an objective
  • Competition ? only firms with adaptive decisions
    will prosper and survive
  • Competition also in political market (e.g.
    subsidies)
  • Consequences for strategic management
  • normative what the firm should do?
  • positive why the firm is behaving in a certain
    way?
  • Are firms rational? Do they commit suicide?
    Why?

46
Boundaries of the firm
  • The concept of boundary in firms and markets
  • Markets boundaries? ? Useful to study the
    economy
  • Firms boundaries? ? Useful to study the
    market
  • Cases
  • McDonalds
  • Trucking construction
  • Resale price maintenance
  • Pampered for free
  • Firms are not necessarily the relevant
    competitive unit for competition policy? (see
    below)

47
Pampered for free
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