Title: Methodology in LAW & ECONOMICS
1Methodology inLAW ECONOMICS
- Antonio Nicita
- UNIVERSITY OF SIENA
- Faculty of Economics R.M. Goodwin
ESNIE 2004
2Plural, please!
- Law Economics is not only Chicago LE
- Several schools of thought, several recent
developments which link the study of law, of
economic institutions and of organizations - Some common features
- a) economic analysis of emergence, evolution
and change in private and public orderings, norms
and customs - b) study of the effects of law on the economy
and study of the effects of the economy on legal
change - c) application of economic methodology on the
analysis of law - d) acknowledgment of complexity and
interdependence between legal rules, social
norms and economic institutions
3Alchian Becker Buchanan Calabresi Coase Coleman Co
mmons Demsetz Director Dworkin Ely Llewellyn North
Posner Rose-Ackerman Simon Stigler Sunstein Tullo
ck Veblen Williamson
- Methodology and Content
- Chicago Law and Economics
- New Haven School
- New Institutional Economics
- Institutional Economics
- Public Choice Theorists
- Critical Legal Studies
- Post-Chicago Law and Economics
- Behavioral Law and Economics
- (Pragmatism)
4Aims Approaches(Sunstein et al. 1998)
- Positive Law and Economics
- How agents behave in response to legal rules
and how rules are shaped? - Prescriptive Law and Economics
- What rules should be adopted to advance
specific ends? - Normative Law and Economics
- How to select specific ends of the legal
system?
5Chicago Mainstream/1
- Pre-conditions (Ruthenford, 2003)
- Methodological individualism and Mainstream
Economics - The impulse of Antitrust law and economics
- Critical analysis of Sherman Act, the efficiency
of vertical restraints, pro-competitive intra
brand restrictions, efficiency of leveraging,
tie-in, bundling - The efficiency of Common Law
- Common Law, as a Judge-made Law, is best
understood not merely as a pricing mechanism but
as pricing system designed to bring about an
efficient allocation of resources in the
Kaldor-Hicks sense (Posner, 1987) - Development of the Common Law could be
explained as if its goal was to maximize
allocative efficiency (MercuroMedema, 1997)
6Chicago Mainstream/2
- What a wonderful world!
- Individuals are informed rational maximizers and
their behavior is easy to formalize and predict - Individual (always) respond to price incentives
- Microeconomics works (always) well
- Legal rules are (and should be) efficient (ex.
efficient breach and remedies design in
contracts) - Wealth maximization has guided (and should guide)
law, statutes and State intervention
7Chicago Mainstream/3
- Efficiency, values and consequences
- Externalities are reciprocal in nature (Coase,
1960) - Legal rules (law and private arrangements) may
perform better than State intervention - Absent transaction costs economic resources will
be pushed in the ends of those agents who value
them the most - With positive transaction costs inertia (Posner,
Coase), State intervention (Coase)
8Coase vs Posner
- COASE Im certainly not an expert in law and
economics - POSNER(...) NIE, save in Coases version, is
just economics () and the LE movement is
economics too - COASE After having read Posners paper I felt I
could not remain silent () on Posners highly
inaccurate account on my views - COASE The trouble with Posner () is not with
what he doesnt know but with what he knows that
aint so - Comparing wealth maximization and Coase theorem
9The peculiarity of Coase
- Reciprocal externalities imply incomplete
definition of property rights and rivalry in uses - Pareto-relevant externalities could not always be
absorbed by market mechanism economic exchange
is not automatic - Compared analysis of institutional performance
based on transaction costs - No preference towards one form of governance or
another - Rights definition and market as a public good
- Market as Equilibrium
- Case Study (pragmatism) methodology against
formalism -
10Property vs Liability rules
- Calabresi (1961, 1970, 1972)
- 2 ways of protecting entitlements against
externalities injuction (property rule) and
compensatory damages (liability rule), the choice
depends on transaction costs - liability rules may reduce the ex-ante and
ex-post costs of accidents - Specific remedies require empirical assessment
of economic consequences (economics and fairness) - New Haven School emphasis on the study of all
aspects of government policy (the role of
statutes vs common law)
11Public Choice and the role of the State
- Economic analysis is extended to nonmarket
decisionmaking (theory of the State, voting
rules, bureaucratic choice, regulation,
corruption, etc.) - Chicago assumption on homo economicus
- The motivation for political exchange is mutual
advantage - Rent seeking behavior may reduce the efficiency
of public coordination
12New Institutionalism and TCE
- New with respect to...
- Unit of analysis is Transaction
- The paradigmatic problem is to minimize
transaction costs - Transaction (bounded rationality, incomplete
contracts, opportunism, asset specificity) - Emphasis on private orderings (organizations as
tribunals, authority and hierarchy) - Efficiency of vertical restraints and mergers
- Compared second best efficiency of alternative
institutions in performing transaction costs
13Posner vs Williamson
- POSNER (...) in the process of moderating
Coase, Williamson has gone toward collapsing the
NIE back into mainstream economics which is
fine with me - POSNER the LE movement differs from the new
institutional economics in that it has no, or at
least very few, aspiration to change economic
theory or economists empirical methodology -
- WILLIAMSON() Posner has not understood the
Coasian message (or does not like what he hears)
misconstrues game theory has a truncated
understanding of bounded rationality, the
economics of information, and maximising
mischaracterizes empirical research in
transaction costs economics - How to consider the distance among Posner, Coase
and Williamson?
14Common features
- Maximizing (even bounded rational) agents
- Static environment (no ex-post competition
skills and knowledge are given) - Equilibrium (and competitive) markets
- Efficiency of market allocation (with negligible
transaction costs) - A paradox non market institutions emerge as
response to market transaction costs but market
is employed to allocate control (property rights) - Zero transaction costs for the set up of existing
legal system - Efficiency defense of vertical restraints
- Conservative attitude towards private economic
power
15Old institutionalism/1
- Institutionalism and Complexity (Veblen, Commons,
Mitchell, Llewellyn) - Evolution and growth of institutions, habits and
norms - Complex interaction among rights, duties,
liberties and exposures - Rejection of methodological individualism
- Transaction as a complex unit of analysis in
which conflicts abound - Efficiency in transactions depends on the
definition of rights - Complexity of enforcement devices
16Old institutionalism/2What is a transaction?
- J.R. Commons (1924, 1934, 1950) economic
exchanges which take place in the real world
economy are characterised by positive transaction
costs. In order to properly assess the nature and
the extent of transaction costs it is necessary
to investigate in more detail the notion of
transaction. - when we reduce all prospective buyers and
sellers upon a given market to those who
participate in one bargaining transaction as our
smallest unit of investigation, then they are the
best two buyers and the best two sellers,
meaning the two buyers who offer the highest
prices and the two sellers who offer to accept
the lowest prices, in consideration of transfers
of ownership. ... The best two sellers are
those able to sell at the lowest price. They
compete for choice of alternatives offered by the
best two buyers, those able to buy at the highest
prices, while, in turn, the best two buyers are
competing for choice of alternatives offered by
the best two sellers. - instead of the exchange of physical things
between two parties, as contemplated in the
former physical economics, there are five
parties, all of whom are potential and then
they are successively actual participants in
the lawful alienation and acquisition of
ownership. These five parties are four
competitors (two buyers and two sellers) and the
enforcer or judge who is ready to issue
commands to any of the buyers and sellers in the
name of sovereignty, if any dispute arises.
17Commons vs Williamson
- Transaction vs economic exchange
- From 5 agents to bilateral monopoly
- Williamson develops the efficiency branch but
neglects the monopoly branch in a theory of the
firm (market-contract interaction) - Williamson under-estimates the role of market
competition as a discipline market device
(fundamental transformation and equilibrium
market) - Specificity is not a merely a technological
rather a transactional matter - Private orderings or public/private
complementarity? - History matters
- Power vs efficiency
18Power and Critical Legal Studies
- Law as a social institution
- The idea of efficient norms (wealth maximizing)
embodies a liberist masking aimed at preserving
existing social order - The evolution of law and rights depends on the
allocation of power - From individualism to collectivism (law and ends)
- Formalism and Chicago methodology is ideology
19Methodological issues
- Predictions and the realism of assumption
- Posner logical truth explains causality
direction (we should be pragmatic about theory.
It is a tool, rather than a glipse of ultimate
truth, and the criterion of a tool is utility) - Coase even if predictions on the basis of
unrealistic assumptions are correct, a theory
based upon them may fail in providing insight in
the working of the economic (or legal) system - Posnernot only is it wrong to be against formal
theory, but it is wrong to suppose that formal
economic theory is inherently interventionist.
Beckers example on the impact of theory on
empirical research. - Posner against pragmatismpragmatism gave legal
realism intellectual shape .... Then prgmatism
died and realism died
20Post-Chicago developments/1History and
Complementarity
- Comparing Chicago and CLS approaches
- Norms are efficient
- Norms are the result of discretionary power
(incentives to subvert rules) - Is there a possible self-enforcing institutional
equilibrium? (Pagano and Rowthorn, 1996 Aoki,
2001) - History matters (legal origins) process of
selection of alternative evolutionary paths
against possible multiple equilibria (rise of
regulatory state) - Emergence of path-dependency in the evolution of
norms according to institutional complementarity
21Post-Chicago developments/2Behavioral Law and
Economics
- How will law affect human behavior?
- What will individuals likely response to changes
in the rules be? - Why does law take the form that it does?
- BLE suggests that a superior understanding of
actual human behavior will improve answers and
predictions to such questions (Sunstein et al
1998) - Bounded rationality (rules of thumb are
predictable) - Bounded willpower (consistency)
- Bounded self-interest (fairness and acrimony)
22Behavioral LEexamples and methods
- Predicting inertia in Coase Theorem and choices
in UG (fairness, endowment effect) - Analysis of sunk costs (experiments with UG)
- Analysis of post-trials negotiations
- Self-serving (assessment of fairness is distorted
by self-interest) - Endogenous preferences
- Law and legal change is affected (and affects)
agents perception of what is fair - BLE may help in predicting not only the impact
but also the dimension of the effects of legal
change
23Post-Chicago developments/3Leveraging in
Antitrust
- Recent works in antitrust law and economics
trespass the Chicago approach to leveraging,
vertical restraints and bundling practices
(Hovenkamp, 2000 Rey and Tirole, 2004 Nalebuff,
2000) - Leveraging should not be applied comparing two
monopolists (upstream and downstream) against an
integrated monopolist with downstream competitive
markets, but an integrated monopolist against
vertical network competition - Defensive leveraging has recently been applied
against Microsoft (US, Europe and Korea) and for
the assessment of vertical mergers with network
effects and bundled goods - The example of Bork as a man at war with
himself
24Post-Chicago developments/4The question of
access to bottleneck
- When a monopolist possesses an intermediate asset
which is indivisible, unique (not substitutable),
and for which technical and economic sharing is
possible, the asset is an essential facility and
competition and regulatory authority should grant
access to downstream competitors (essential
facility doctrine) - In IPRs this idea has conducted to introduction
of alternative instruments for providing
incentives to innovate other than patents - In liberalized market the Williamsonian attitude
towards vertical integration has been replaced by
vertical separation with the idea of sustaining
short term increased transaction costs against
long-term more competitive markets
25Research AgendaMethodology, Content, Aims
- In LE, methodology is influenced by the object
of the study and the ends to be reached - Post-Chicago developments show heterogeneity in
object but a common feature in assumptions
(bounded rationality but predictable maximizing
behavior explicit consideration of agents
hidden purposes) - Norms are not simple solutions in a game but the
result of institutional complementarity among
several domains of choices - The enforcement of legal rules is the complex
result of complementary devices (such as the
State and the Market) - The impact of legal change is to be assessed and
predicted according to actual behavior of real
agents.