Labor-managed firm;
capital-managed firm;
Ward-Domar-Vanek model;
horizon problem;
membership markets;
profit maximization;
alienable capital;
inalienable labor;
theory of the firm;
history of economic thought;
CAPITAL HIRES LABOR;
WORKER-OWNED FIRMS;
PRODUCER COOPERATIVES;
CONTESTED EXCHANGE;
CONVENTIONAL FIRMS;
POLITICAL-ECONOMY;
ASSET OWNERSHIP;
PROPERTY-RIGHTS;
ENTERPRISES;
MODELS;
D O I:
10.1111/apce.12194
中图分类号:
F [经济];
学科分类号:
02 ;
摘要:
The economic theory of the labor-managed firm dates back 60 years. Here I review the intellectual history of this field, with critical remarks and proposals for future development. The decades of the 1960s-1980s saw a burst of theoretical speculation that generally did not hold up well under empirical scrutiny. By the 1990s, progress on the mainstream theory of the firm was overtaking some of this early research. At the same time, a growing body of econometric work on labor-managed firms was providing new stylized facts for theorists to explain. While the earlier period was characterized by an excess supply of theories relative to facts, more recently the balance has begun to tip in the opposite direction. I close by suggesting new theoretical directions that might shed light on the empirical asymmetries between capital-managed and labor-managed firms.