250 likes | 268 Views
Formalization Institutions: The Law of Impersonal Transactions—Meaning and Difficulties. Building Market Institutions: Property Rights, Business Formalization and Economic Development University of Chicago Press, 2010 Benito ARRUÑADA Pompeu Fabra University
E N D
Formalization Institutions: The Law of Impersonal Transactions—Meaning and Difficulties Building Market Institutions: Property Rights, Business Formalization and Economic Development University of Chicago Press, 2010 Benito ARRUÑADAPompeu Fabra University ISNIE 13th Annual ConferenceUC Berkeley, June 19, 2009
Outline • The problem of impersonal exchange • Sequential exchange • The contract formalization solution: • Efficiently diluting property rights • Prevalence of ‘sequential’ exchange • Consequences & difficulties: • E.g., rules are not enough & luddite lawyers
The judge’s dilemma: The tradeoff of property versus liability rules • Property rule: No one deprived without consent • Provides better enforcement: Consent of right holder required for a right to be damaged, but • increases information asymmetry b/c title uncertainty deters acquirers because rights survive • Liability rule: Protects less informed party • Reduces transaction costs, but • provides bad enforcement b/c consent not required • Goal: Overcoming this tradeoff, achieving both good enforcement and low transactions costs
Organized (voluntary, verifiable) dilution of property rights • Liability rule—as in, e.g., Merchant Law: • Ruling for third party makes information asymmetry irrelevant • Property rule conditioned to publicity: e.g., real property • Publicity makes information asymmetry manageable • Registration makes it irrelevant • Preserving a role for consent keeps the enforcement advantage of property rights • Consent in choosing agent and activating liability rule • Consent in recording or registering • Independent intervention ex ante: • Commitment Avoids opportunistic choice of rules ex post by P • Publicity Obviates information asymmetry to T
Conclusions • Legal title the key info asymmetry for institutions • Property, in rem, rights key for impersonal trade • Overcoming tradeoff b/w property and transaction costs requires more than rules: organization • Verifiable publicity of originative contracts • Independence from parties to the originative contract
Why is it so hard to develop these market-enabling institutions? • Tortuous development • Liability is the default rule of impersonal trade • Commerce since 11th century • Corporate limitations not applied against third parties • Property titling moves into registration • But delayed +10 centuries, with awkward exceptions, failed in developing registers (US mess, Peru, etc). • Path-dependency: law developed for personal exchange Luddite conflict: • Artisan jurists defending rents and using pre-market concepts • But the competing industry is… a public bureaucracy