The Economics of Contracts
Theories and Applications
Jean-Michel Glachant editor Eric Brousseau editor
Format:Paperback
Publisher:Cambridge University Press
Published:17th Oct '02
Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back
A 2002 survey of economics of contracts appealing to scholars in economics, management and law.
A comprehensive 2002 synthesis of the economic analysis of contracts, written by leading international scholars. The book offers a combination of theoretical and applied economics along with insights from law and management sciences, appealing to scholars, graduate students and practitioners in economics, management and law.A contract is an agreement under which two parties make reciprocal commitments in terms of their behavior to coordinate. As this concept has become essential to economics in the last 30 years, three main theoretical frameworks have emerged: 'incentive theory', 'incomplete-contract theory' and 'transaction-costs theory'. These frameworks have enabled scholars to renew both the microeconomics of coordination (with implications for industrial organization, labor economics, law and economics, organization design) and the macroeconomics of 'market' (decentralized) economies and of the institutional framework. These developments have resulted in new analyses of a firm's strategy and State intervention (regulation of public utilities, anti-trust, public procurement, institutional design, liberalization policies, etc.). Based on contributions by the leading scholars in the field, this 2002 book provides an overview of developments in these analytical currents, presents their various aspects, and proposes expanding horizons for theoreticians and practitioners.
ISBN: 9780521893138
Dimensions: 226mm x 150mm x 36mm
Weight: 800g
602 pages