2000
DOI: 10.1006/jcec.2000.1663
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On the Neutrality of Asset Ownership for Work Incentives

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Cited by 23 publications
(2 citation statements)
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“…The upshot was that I became interested in comparing KMFs and LMFs within a framework where no legally binding contracts existed, so all input contributions or side payments had to be enforced through repeated game mechanisms. In one article of this kind (Dow, 2000, 2018a, ch. 16), I was able to show that there was no difference in work incentives between firms where workers jointly owned the firm's capital stock and firms where the capital stock was owned by an external investor.…”
Section: Opportunism Problemsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The upshot was that I became interested in comparing KMFs and LMFs within a framework where no legally binding contracts existed, so all input contributions or side payments had to be enforced through repeated game mechanisms. In one article of this kind (Dow, 2000, 2018a, ch. 16), I was able to show that there was no difference in work incentives between firms where workers jointly owned the firm's capital stock and firms where the capital stock was owned by an external investor.…”
Section: Opportunism Problemsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Other writers used ideas about repeated games to argue that LMFs could achieve efficient effort levels, at least under certain conditions (MacLeod , Putterman and Skillman , Dong and Dow , Dow ). Although work incentives continue to be of interest for the theory of the firm in general, the recent LMF literature seems to have moved away from this topic, perhaps because researchers have become convinced that the LMF has no real liability in this area relative to the KMF.…”
Section: The Present (1993–2017)mentioning
confidence: 99%