1 / 13

Wonjoon Chung School of Labor and Employment Relations (LER) September 18 th , 2012

Ownership and control rights in internet portal alliances, 1995-1999 Daniel W. Elfenbein and Josh Lerner , 2003 Published in The RAND Journal of Economics. Wonjoon Chung School of Labor and Employment Relations (LER) September 18 th , 2012. About the authors…. Daniel W. Elfenbein

Download Presentation

Wonjoon Chung School of Labor and Employment Relations (LER) September 18 th , 2012

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Ownership and control rights in internet portal alliances, 1995-1999Daniel W. Elfenbein and Josh Lerner, 2003Published in The RAND Journal of Economics Wonjoon Chung School of Labor and Employment Relations (LER) September 18th, 2012

  2. About the authors… • Daniel W. Elfenbein • Associate Professor of Organization and Strategy at Washington University at St. Louis • Ph.D. (Business Economics), Harvard University • Josh Lerner • Jacob H. Schiff Professor of Investment Banking at Harvard University • Ph.D. (Economics), Harvard University

  3. Introduction • Incomplete-contract model: Central to the modern firm theory • 2 Incomplete-contract models in the paper • Grossman-Hart-Moore property-rights framework (GHM model) : Grossman & Hart (1986) and Hart & Moore, (1990) • Aghion and Tirole’s (1994) model of contracting for innovations To examine alliance contracts between Internet portals and other firms using a contract-theory perspective • In a new contracting setting: Internet portal industry • Characteristics of Internet environment fits well with assumptions of incomplete-contract models

  4. Contractual incompleteness and its consequences • Formal contracts i.e., written • Incomplete contract due to information conditions • Incomplete contract by invocation of transaction costs • Unforeseen contingencies; • The cost of writing contracts; and • The cost of enforcing contacts. • If contracts cannot fully specify the usage of the asset in every state of the world, then who gets the right to choose? • Inability to observe effort and enforce agreement: problems • Property-rights approach?

  5. Essence of Property-rights theory • The ownership of an asset: incentive to make asset-specific investments • Transferring ownership of an asset: a benefit and a cost Ownership Bargaining power Ownership Asset Specified Property Rights Residual Property Rights When unspecified by contract

  6. Contractual incompleteness and its consequences • Ex ante allocation of ownership and specified control rights may not maximize ex post surplus • e.g., Aghion & Tirole (1994) • R&D alliance between a research unit and a customer • Ex ante bargaining power: 2 cases • Research unit has bargaining power: efficiently allocation, similar to Grossman & Hart, 1986 • Customer has it: inefficient allocation • Raised relative bargaining power issue

  7. Portal alliances and the contracting environment • Portals: Internet sites that provides a wide array of services and linkages to users • Began operations in 1994, introduction of www • Benefits from alliances: Portals and partner firms • Alliance contract for 3 types of assets • The servers used by the alliances / The uniform resource locator (URL) / The customer data • The effort decisions of both parties were likely to have a substantial impact on the value of the alliance • Asset ownership (residual control rights) and specified control rights: similar role based on property right theory

  8. Data set and Analysis • A set of 106 contracts between portals and other firms between 1995 and 1999 from Recap/IT • Supplementary financial information from Compustatand Worldscope • IVs • The calendar dates of agreement • Relative effort required in the alliance (+1 / 0 / -1) • Traffic on internet properties of portal and partner: Portal’s sites> Partners’ (a month before the signing of the agreement) • Relative financial health of the two parties • Potential problems: • Non-independence of the observations; and • Signalling

  9. Results - Ownership

  10. Results - controls

  11. Conclusion • To examine how well contract theory explains ownership and specification of control rights in alliances by internet portals from 1995 to 1999 • Results support for models of incomplete contracting: • The division of ownership was sensitive to the allocation of effort between parties (consistent with prediction of the GHM Models) • The allocation of control rights was sensitive to relative bargaining power of the two parties (consistent with prediction of the Aghion and Tirole (1994) model)

  12. Remaining questions • Other observable measures of performance and effort • See Elfenbein & Lerner (2002) • Designing alliance contracts: exclusivity and contingencies in internet portal alliances • Two separate theories to explain division of ownership and control rights – technological consideration • How bargaining changes under conditions in which both parties have upward bias in the assessment of the value of internet traffic

  13. Contributions • An empirical articlethat explores the influence of transaction and institutional-level factors on alliance formation • Finds empirical evidence that the structure of the alliance contract provides significant support for the predictions of incomplete-contract theories

More Related