Most theories of the firm within economics pick up the narrative with the existence of the corporation as a given. They then bend over backwards to retro-fit this highly centralized pseudo economy into the larger free market narrative preferred in all major textbooks. In so doing they blithely ignore Alfred Chandler’s famous explanation for the rise of modern business organization, which he argued became possible “only when the hand of management proved be more efficient than the invisible hand of market forces”.
Chandler, being a historian rather than an economist, was more interested in reality than in hypotheticals. He understood and tried to explain the actual landscape of large-scale business. I have always wondered what would have happened to economics had it absorbed the true gist of the challenge issued by Coase in 1937. The impudence of that challenge has never been fully understood. Coase asked simply: “why do firms exist?”. After all if market forces are as supreme as the textbooks tell us, there is no room for business organization at all. We ought be able to accomplish all our transacting through a web of contracts in the open marketplace.
Indeed the most common response of economists to the challenge represented by business organization is to argue that a business organization is simply such a web of contracts. In this view we can continue to ignore any oddities of business organization since it is indistinguishable from the market. In this view the firm exists at a “nexus of contracts” and has no special attributes that cannot be negotiated and contracted for in the marketplace.
Except this is not true....
The key to understanding corporations is to separate the economics from everything else. We need to do this because the economics, as expressed in various theories of the firm, are usually entirely idealized and bear no resemblance to reality. Economists, as usual, love to theorize about things that don’t exist but which they wished did exist....
Corporations, far from being products of the free market, are actually franchises of the state. They are sub-contracted jurisdictions.
To be a corporation is to possess a charter from the state. That charter brings privileges not available to non-corporations. The most notable privilege is that the corporation is recognized as a distinct legal entity separate from any “natural” person who may be associated with it. And because the corporation is brought into existence prior to it being populated or animated by any natural person, it is not owned by any of them. It is unowned. In this sense it is akin to a nation state, the church, most universities, and, at least here in the US, most towns, It would be odd to describe any of those bodies as being owned by the people who animate them. Yet we routinely talk of firms being owned by stockholders. It is this misattribution of ownership that leads most economists astray in their theorizing...Peter Radford explain why this is important and what problems misunderstanding engenders.
The Radford Free Press
Who “Owns” a Corporation?
Corporations Cont’dPeter Radford
A corporation is, at least in theory, owned and controlled by its members. In a joint-stock company the members are known as shareholders and each of their shares in the ownership, control, and profits of the corporation is determined by the portion of shares in the company that they own.
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