1992
DOI: 10.2307/2118370
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An Estimate of Resource Expenditures on Transfer Activity in the United States

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Cited by 79 publications
(27 citation statements)
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References 11 publications
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“…In such a case the sum of the solutions to the first-order conditions exceeds the value of the prize Q; there is the false appearance of an over dissipation of rents. Tullock (1980Tullock ( , 1984Tullock ( , 1985Tullock ( , 1987Tullock ( , 1989 devoted considerable attention to the case of over dissipation because of the induced excess social waste; see Dougan (1991) for a critical comment, and Laband and Sophocleus (1992) for estimates of the resource expenditures. In Tullock (1984) it was acknowledged that over dissipation may be due to a failure of the second-order conditions 2 In the vernacular of the game theory, over dissipation is not part of a Nash equilibrium.…”
Section: U2(ylx ) = [1 -~(Xy)]q -Ymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In such a case the sum of the solutions to the first-order conditions exceeds the value of the prize Q; there is the false appearance of an over dissipation of rents. Tullock (1980Tullock ( , 1984Tullock ( , 1985Tullock ( , 1987Tullock ( , 1989 devoted considerable attention to the case of over dissipation because of the induced excess social waste; see Dougan (1991) for a critical comment, and Laband and Sophocleus (1992) for estimates of the resource expenditures. In Tullock (1984) it was acknowledged that over dissipation may be due to a failure of the second-order conditions 2 In the vernacular of the game theory, over dissipation is not part of a Nash equilibrium.…”
Section: U2(ylx ) = [1 -~(Xy)]q -Ymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…A very different type of market failure encourages rent-seeking behavior, and has been analyzed by 17 See, for example, Laband and Sophocleus (1992), who estimate annual U.S. expenditures on rent-seeking to be approximately $1 trillion in 1985. To be sure, this figure includes estimated costs of crime prevention, legal disputes, military expenditures, costs associated with lobbying, and imputed costs of obtaining government transfers -as well as more standard items such as expenditures to obtain monopoly positions and import licenses.…”
Section: Theories Of Imperfect and Inefficient Economiesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Anderson (1999) estimates that fraudulent transfers amount to $550 billion annually in the United States. Laband and Sophocleus (1992) report that investments in white-collar crime prevention cost $216 million in the United States in 1985. However, the scope of our inquiry is wider than fraud.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%