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I believe we
were discussing some of these issues recently. Besides learning what a “lens of contract” meant, I’ve learned
about the “science of choice” as opposed to the “science of contract” and how
they tie into legal immigration today. – Karen Watters Cole Even Without Law,
Contracts Can Be Enforced
By VIRGINIA POSTREL @ http://www.nytimes.com/2002/10/10/business/10SCEN.html Would you lend a complete stranger $10,000? How would you get your money back? Trusting people you don't know with large sums may sound
like the height of foolishness.
But a modern economy depends on exactly such impersonal exchange. Every day, people lend not thousands, but millions of
dollars, to strangers with every expectation that they'll be repaid. Vendors supply goods and services,
trusting that they'll be compensated within a reasonable time. How does it all work? Traditional economics tends to assume away that basic
question. On the blackboard,
supply and demand meet without a doubt that supplier will really deliver or
that demander will pay. A lively field of economics with an unfortunately clunky
name looks behind the blackboard assumptions. The new institutional economics studies how people arrange their
affairs; how they create institutions, including legal sanctions, social norms
and organizational structures, to govern their relationships; how those
institutions spur or hinder economic growth; and how those institutions improve
through trial and error. The International
Society for the New Institutional Economics (www.isnie.org) recently held its sixth annual meeting at the
Massachusetts Institute of Technology, attracting about 200 economists and
other social scientists from 40 countries. Once a heterodox challenge to convention, this field is
increasingly part of the mainstream. It asks deep theoretical questions and ties those questions
to pressing empirical realities, most notably how formerly Communist countries
can successfully make the transition to markets. Researchers look at economic activity through what Oliver E. Williamson, a former president of the society,
calls the "lens
of contract." "The lens of contract focuses predominantly on gains
from trade whereas orthodoxy is focused on resource allocation (prices and
output)," writes Professor Williamson, an economist at the Haas School of Business at the University
of California at Berkeley. To the "science
of choice"
developed by traditional economics, the new institutional economics adds a "science of contract." To understand how contracts work, it helps to examine
problem cases where contract law is underdeveloped or contracts are hard to
enforce. In a paper for the conference, the economic historian Avner Greif of Stanford looks at how merchants in the late
Middle Ages developed institutions that allowed a commercial revolution. "How," he asks, "could a creditor from one
corner of Europe, for example, trust a debtor from another corner, about whom
he knew little and who could avoid interacting with him in the future, to pay
his debt?" The answer was the community responsibility system, in which
every member of a community was liable for every other member's debts. If someone in Community A didn't pay
what he owed, Community A had the choice to either cease trading with Community
B or compensate it for the damage and seek retribution from the individual. Because communities wanted to maintain trading relations,
they policed their own. As trade
flourished and communities grew, however, the system began to break down. The costs to an individual who cheated
shrank, while larger merchants had to bear a high cost for other people's
cheating. Communities abandoned the old system. In 1279, for instance, Florence,
Venice, Genoa and other cities agreed not to hold any person or his goods
because of someone else's debts.
They also agreed to imprison debtors who fled to their towns. Over time, new forms of enforcement developed, forcing
creditors to evaluate borrowers by using indicators of their individual
merits. But the community
responsibility system provided the institutional scaffolding that made the
expansion of trade possible. Even
without centralized law, it was possible to make enforceable contracts. Turning to the present, Guido Friebel of the Stockholm School of
Economics
and Sergei Guriev of
the New Economic School in Moscow offer a provocative argument about an extralegal contract:
the payments illegal migrants promise traffickers who arrange long-term,
long-distance moves from, say, China to the United States or Europe. It costs an illegal migrant as much as $35,000 to go from
China to the United States and $25,000 to go to Europe. (This research does not
apply to short-haul migration like that involving the United States and
Mexico.) But these are mostly poor people who can't possibly pay that
much in advance. Instead, they
make a down payment and agree to work a certain term — for Fujian Chinese, the
average is 26 months — to repay the rest. On arrival, they become temporary slaves or, as they were
known when America was settled, indentured servants. But in contrast to colonial times, these days these
contracts aren't legally enforceable. In theory, the immigrants could run away once they were in
the country. They don't escape,
however, because they fear deportation.
Their illegal status acts to enforce their contracts. (Traffickers generally keep their deals because they face
competition in the home country. A
bad reputation would cost them future business.) Tightening immigration enforcement paradoxically supports
indentured servitude and, hence, illegal migration. By contrast, Professors Friebel and Guriev argue, making
legal immigration easier could actually reduce low-wage migration. Traffickers would have less leverage to
collect debts and wouldn't be as likely to finance poor migrants. But more affluent, higher-skilled
people would be able to immigrate legally. These are two small examples of a much larger
phenomenon: When the rule of law
is absent or imperfect, people find other ways to make contracts workable. But those alternatives may be unstable
or inefficient. "Whatever the rules of the game," Professor
Williamson writes, "the lens of contract is also usefully brought to bear
on the play of the game." |
- Re: FW: institutional economics and the lens of contrac... Karen Watters Cole
- Re: FW: institutional economics and the lens of co... Harry Pollard
- Re: FW: institutional economics and the lens of co... Keith Hudson
- Re: FW: institutional economics and the lens o... Ray Evans Harrell
- Inheritance laws (was Re: FW: institutiona... Keith Hudson
- Re: FW: institutional economics and the lens of co... Harry Pollard
