>From a friend

Reading  continues to be a passion for many, even in this Infotainment era,
and for some it remains a fashion.  Somehow I enjoy reading tirelessly, than
delectably sipping the  wine and  viewing the 'Idiot Box" (Is it still?)  If
you are one of  the formers, then this will be interesting to you !

 *Chaks*

A great economist reaches 100th birthday

Posted on : 2nd January 2011


Nobel prize-winning economist Ronald Coase has just celebrated his
100th birthday. Coase is a brilliant thinker and his insights were
enormously influential on me and many of my colleagues. His 1991 Nobel was
for his discovery and clarification of the significance of transaction
costs  for the institutional structure and functioning of the economy.

The first time I heard Coase name was from my colleague Riel Miller, who was
working for the OECD in 1994. He speculated that Coase and a paper he had
written in the 1930s might be the key to understanding the Internet. We had
a number of discussions about Coase work and I began to use his analytical
framework in my own research and credit Coase insights in almost every
speech I gave.

Following is an excerpt from my 1995 book, The Digital Economy:

*Theme   Molecularization*

The new economy is a molecular economy. The old corporation is being
disaggregated, replaced by dynamic molecules and clusters of individuals and
entities which form the basis of economic activity.  The organization does
not necessarily disappear, but it is transformed. Mass becomes molecular in
all aspects of economic and social life.

The principal economic unit of the industrial economy was the corporation.
The command-and- control hierarchy found its roots in the church and
military bureaucracies of the agricultural age but was extended to become
the firm.  The objective of every CEO and board was to grow the corporation
size, revenue and profit.

The traditional hierarchy has been in deep trouble for years now because it
was poorly equipped to respond to the new business needs. Conventional
wisdom of  the last decade has called for more responsive, flatter, team
based structures.  The most significant movement to create such horizontal,
process-oriented structures is business process reengineering. However, as
Riel Miller, an economist working with the Alliance for Converging
Technologies, put it. The necessity of adding knowledge at every step in the
value chain is beginning to call into question the familiar notion of the
firm as an organizational unit.  The Net may be, at one and the same time,
the source of both the demise and salvation of the firm as we have known

Over fifty years ago a famous economist, [Ronald] Coase , asked why firms
exist. Why are there groups of people working together under one
organizational framework?  He wondered why there is no market within the
firm. Why is it unprofitable to have each worker, each step in the
production process, become an independent buyer and seller?  Why doesn’t the
draftsperson auction their services to the engineer?  Why is it that the
engineer does not sell designs to the highest bidder? One of the main
answers to these questions has to do with the cost of information.

Producing a loaf of bread, assembling a car or running a hospital emergency
ward involves a number of steps where cooperation and common purpose are
essential for a useful product. An emergency room where each doctor bids  for
nursing services in an attempt to get the lowest price, while at the same
time determining if the nurse is actually capable of assisting with the
operation, might provide a fully functioning market but not a particularly
useful product for a dead patient. Similarly, holding an auction before the
axle assembler would pass along product to the chassis assembler might slow
down the line.  It would be even less efficient if the information on
engineering  viability and compatibility needed to be purchased on the
shop-floor marketplace at every step.

What makes a pure market impractical is the time and cost of acquiring the
information needed to undertake complex production processes. What is being
sold  What is the quality of the labor?  What is the quality of the raw
material or intermediate input?  What is the price for the final product?
How will it be sold? By whom? With what kind of information or marketing?
Who will finance the production process and how much will financing cost?

The ensemble of functions within a firm consist not only of a series of
discrete products but also the infrastructure of collaboration.

A clear framework and strict regimentation worked on many battlefields and
marketplaces of the past. The role of the overarching infrastructure of the
firm or army was clear and indivisible. But today, as Miller puts it.

The Net  does not change the rules, but it changes what is possible.  It
opens up new horizons for what is economically and practically feasible. The
costs of information and coordination are dropping.  More than ever we are
in a position to create wealth by adding knowledge to each product at each
step.The industrial hierarchy and economy are giving away to molecular
organizations and economic structures.

The word molecularization is awkward, but helpful. In physics, a molecule is
one of the basic elements of matter. It is the smallest particle into which
a substance can be divided and still have the chemical identity of the
original substance.  Molecules can be held together by electrical forces. In
solids, attracting and repelling forces are balanced, holding the molecules
in place. The molecules do not have enough energy to move to another part of
the solid.  In liquids, the molecules move about easily although they still
have attractive forces between each other.  Certain organic compounds called
liquid crystals have properties of both liquids and solids molecules form
clusters which can move about and change rapidly, yet they retain a degree
of structure.  As conditions change (temperature) , the state of the
molecules changes as well. The analogy is helpful in understanding the new
economy.  The new enterprise has a molecular structure. It is based on the
individual.  The knowledge worker (human molecule) functions as a business
unit of one.

 Motivated, self-learning, entrepreneurial workers empowered by and
collaborating through new tools apply their knowledge and creativity to
create value. Conditions may warrant a solid structure  tightly binding
molecules together. More likely, conditions will require more dynamic
relationships between molecules  causing them to cluster in teams like
liquid crystals, or even to move more freely as in liquids.

The capacity for new relationships is profoundly increased through the new
infrastructure.  There is still a role for the organization to provide a
base structure for such molecular activity, but it is a far cry from the old
hierarchy. When such molecular activity is extended to the economy as a
whole, we can see  very different kinds of relationships which make
discussion of the virtual corporation seem trite.

For example, the mass media will become the molecular media, where readers,
listeners, and viewers become customers able to access and interact with
millions of channels . They do so when they choose, rather than according to
the schedule of a broadcaster.  Mass production becomes molecular production
with production runs of one  rather than one million pairs of jeans.  Even
products become composed of molecules which are link together through
standard interfaces.  The software industry is becoming a parts industry
where companies build and market parts which work with others. Just as a
modern wide-body jet is referred to in the industry as a complex assembly of
parts flying in close formation because most of these parts are not
manufactured by Boeing or Lockheed or McDonnell Douglas, but by their
suppliers, mass marketing becomes molecular marketing as marketers identify
specific customer groups or individuals to receive sales information.


-- 
With best wishes

S Chander

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