TY - JOUR
T1 - Organization and information
T2 - Firms'governance choices in rational-expectations equilibrium
AU - Gibbons, Robert
AU - Holden, Richard
AU - Powell, Michael
N1 - Funding Information:
*We thank Daron Acemoglu, Philippe Aghion, Mathias Dewatripont, Glenn Ellison, Oliver Hart, Bengt Holmstrom, Matt Selove, Sarah Venables, Birger Wernerfelt, Oliver Williamson, the editors, three anonymous referees, and seminar participants at Chicago, Columbia, Harvard, MIT, MBS, Munich, Northwestern, Penn, Queen’s, Sydney, Toronto, ULB, UNSW, and USC for helpful comments. All three authors thank MIT Sloan’s Program on Innovation in Markets and Organizations for financial support, Holden thanks the University of Chicago Booth School of Business for financial support, and Powell thanks the National Science Foundation.
PY - 2012/11
Y1 - 2012/11
N2 - We analyze a rational-expectations model of price formation in an intermediate-good market under uncertainty. There is a continuum of firms, each consisting of a party who can reduce production cost and a party who can discover information about demand. Both parties can make specific investments at private cost, and there is a machine that either party can control. As in incomplete-contracting models, different governance structures (i.e., different allocations of control of the machine) create different incentives for the parties'investments. As in rational-expectations models, some parties may invest in acquiring information, which is then incorporated into the market-clearing price of the intermediate good by these parties' production decisions. The informativeness of the price mechanism affects the returns to specific investments and hence the optimal governance structure for individual firms; meanwhile, the governance choices by individual firms affect the informativeness of the price mechanism. In equilibrium, the informativeness of the price mechanism can induce ex ante homogeneous firms to choose heterogeneous governance structures.
AB - We analyze a rational-expectations model of price formation in an intermediate-good market under uncertainty. There is a continuum of firms, each consisting of a party who can reduce production cost and a party who can discover information about demand. Both parties can make specific investments at private cost, and there is a machine that either party can control. As in incomplete-contracting models, different governance structures (i.e., different allocations of control of the machine) create different incentives for the parties'investments. As in rational-expectations models, some parties may invest in acquiring information, which is then incorporated into the market-clearing price of the intermediate good by these parties' production decisions. The informativeness of the price mechanism affects the returns to specific investments and hence the optimal governance structure for individual firms; meanwhile, the governance choices by individual firms affect the informativeness of the price mechanism. In equilibrium, the informativeness of the price mechanism can induce ex ante homogeneous firms to choose heterogeneous governance structures.
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U2 - 10.1093/qje/qjs033
DO - 10.1093/qje/qjs033
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:84870322340
SN - 0033-5533
VL - 127
SP - 1813
EP - 1841
JO - Quarterly Journal of Economics
JF - Quarterly Journal of Economics
IS - 4
M1 - qjs033
ER -