A superb contribution to the economics of knowledge and information from a Marshallian perspective. The theory elaborated by the book fills an important gap in the economic theory of the firm, and it is likely to open a new line of analysis more attentive to the entrepreneurial function of firms as market-makers.
Journal of Evolutionary Economics, vol 8, 04/98
This book offers a vision of the economy as a system of structured information flow. The structuring is effected by institutions, and in particular by firms, which specialize in processing the information needed to allocate resources properly. Firms are the institutional embodiment of the visions of individual entrepreneurs who believe that they have found a better way of allocating resources.
Entrepreneurial vision is only a partial vision, however, in the sense that it does not encompass the entire economy, but only a subset of it. Free market economies encourage the exploitation of such partial visions because they encourage intermediation---it is by mediating between potential buyers and potential sellers that entrepreneurial visions are realized. A legal framework of private property, coupled with a moral framework to control the incidence of cheating, allows very sophisticated structures of information processing to emerge. These structures effect an elaborate division of labour in the dimensions of information and control. Each firm is a small component of the overall structure of information flow. This structure is highly flexible and evolves continuously as circumstances change. Efficient adaptation is encouraged by rewarding entrepreneurs who create new firms to be slotted into the existing structure.
This vision has evolved over the last fifteen years, during which the author has researched a variety of topics connected with the theory of the firm----entrepreneurship, business culture, multinational enterprise, joint ventures and the like. In each of these areas he has identified the ways in which the orthodox theory of the firm needs to be modified in order to make it work properly. This book represents a major intellectual synthesis of that work.
Les mer
"Information and Organization" models the economy in terms of the flow of information rather than material goods. Instead of the adversarial exploitation of information gaps, it stresses the creative use of information in decision making and co-ordinating the use of resources.
Les mer
I. BASIC PRINCIPLES ; 1. Information Cost and Economic Organization ; 2. The Process of Coordination ; 3. The Nature of the Firm ; 4. Business Networks ; 5. Imitation and Instability ; 6. Information: Factual and Moral ; II. EXTENSIONS AND APPLICATIONS ; 7. Industrial Districts ; 8. Free-Standing Firms ; 9. Chartered Trading Companies ; 10. The Historical Significance of Information Costs
Les mer
`A superb contribution to the economics of knowledge and information from a Marshallian perspective. The theory elaborated by the book fills an important gap in the economic theory of the firm, and it is likely to open a new line of analysis more attentive to the entrepreneurial function of firms as market-makers.'
Journal of Evolutionary Economics, vol 8, 04/98
Les mer
An innovative vision of the economy in terms of the flow of information
A clear, lucid, and wide-ranging exposition of the approach that Casson has refined over the last two decades
Mark Casson is Professor of Economics at the University of Reading
An innovative vision of the economy in terms of the flow of information
A clear, lucid, and wide-ranging exposition of the approach that Casson has refined over the last two decades
Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9780198297802
Publisert
2001
Utgiver
Vendor
Oxford University Press
Vekt
482 gr
Høyde
235 mm
Bredde
156 mm
Dybde
19 mm
Aldersnivå
P, 06
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Heftet
Antall sider
328
Forfatter