----- Original Message -----
From: "Devine, James" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>

I don't think it suggests a critique of NC economics (except maybe for the
fact that it took so long for NC economics to accept the idea of
transactions costs).

The significance for NC economics is that it means that there are many
places where the pure market exchange relation -- the ideal that NC
prefers -- doesn't prevail. If the transactions costs involved buying a
widget exceed the benefits of (presumed) greater productive efficiency of
countracting out vis-a-vis having it produced in-house, then using a
hierarchy to organize in-house production will be preferred by
profit-maximizers over using exchange and producing out-house.

The key distinction is between production costs (actually making a widget)
and transactions costs (costs of making deals, transferring property).
(BTW, the latter corresponds to one kind of what Marx called "unproductive
labor.")

This stuff isn't radical. It was developed by Coase, who's very much part
of the Chicago school of laissez-faire economics.

Jim

======================

Isn't what John Commons did a form of TCE?

Ian

Reply via email to