2009年2月2日星期一

人物外:威廉姆森 Williamson wiki 2009-2-2

Retrieved from "http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Oliver_E._Williamson"

Oliver E. Williamson
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Oliver E. Williamson
Birth September 27, 1932 (1932-09-27) (age 76)
Nationality United States
Field Microeconomics
Influences Ronald Coase, Herbert Simon, Richard Cyert
Influenced Paul L. Joskow

Oliver Eaton Williamson (born September 27, 1932) is a prominent author in the area of transaction cost economics, a student of Ronald Coase, Herbert Simon and Richard Cyert. Williamson received his B.Sc. in management from the MIT Sloan School of Management in 1955, M.B.A. from Stanford University in 1960, and his Ph.D. from Carnegie Mellon University in 1963. He has held professorships in business administration, economics, and law at the University of California, Berkeley since 1988 and is currently the Edgar F. Kaiser Professor Emeritus at the Haas School of Business.
His focus on the costs of transactions have led Williamson to distinguish between repeated case-by-case bargaining on the one hand and relationship-specific contracts on the other. For example, the repeated purchasing of coal from a spot market to meet the daily or weekly needs of an electric utility would represent case by case bargaining. But over time, the utility is likely to form ongoing relationships with a specific supplier, and the economics of the relationship-specific dealings will be importantly different, he has argued.
Other economists have tested Williamson's transaction-cost theories in empirical contexts. One important example is a paper by Paul L. Joskow, "Contract Duration and Relationship-Specific Investments: Empirical Evidence from Coal Markets," in American Economic Review, March 1987. The incomplete contracts approach to the theory of the firm and corporate finance is partly based on the work of Williamson and Coase.[1]
Contents[hide]
1 Theory
2 Awards, fellowships
3 Books
4 See also
5 External links
6 References
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Theory
Oliver Williamson is credited with the development of the term "Information Impactedness", which applies in situations where it is difficult to ascertain what the costs to information are. This condition exists
"mainly because of uncertainty and opportunism, though bounded rationality is involved as well. It exists when true underlying circumstances relevant to the transaction, or related set of transactions, are known to one or more parties but cannot be costlessly discerned by or displayed for others." Market and Hierarchies

Awards, fellowships
Distinguished Fellow, American Economic Association, 2007.
Horst Claus Recktenwald Prize in Economics, 2004.
Fellow, American Academy of Political and Social Science, 1997.
Member, National Academy of Sciences, 1994.
Fellow, American Academy of Arts and Sciences, 1983.
Fellow, Econometric Society, 1977.
Alexander Henderson Award, 1962.

Books
The Mechanisms of Governance ISBN 0-19-513260-2
The Economic Institutions of Capitalism ISBN 0-02-934821-8
The Nature of the Firm: Origins, Evolution, and Development ISBN 0-19-508356-3
Markets and hierarchies : analysis and antitrust implications : a study in the economics of internal organization ISBN 0-02-935360-2

See also
Theory of the firm

External links
Oliver E. Williamson's homepage

References
^ Hart, Oliver, (1995), Firms, Contracts, and Financial Structure. Oxford University Press, ISBN 0198288816.



Categories: Economists Institutional economists American economists American business theorists Members of the National Academy of Sciences Fellows of the Econometric Society 1932 births Living people Carnegie Mellon University alumni

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