The Issue of Efficiency and the Role of State in New Institutional Economics: A Critical Perspective |
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Authors: | Giorgos Meramveliotakis |
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Affiliation: | 1. Department of Economics, University of Crete, Crete, Greece g.meramveliotakis@uoc.gr |
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Abstract: | ABSTRACT This article scrutinises and criticises the notion of efficiency and the role of state in the emergence and evolution of institutions and property rights within the tradition of new institutional economics. Specifically, the attempt is to criticise the efficiency view of the formation of property rights and institutions. It is shown that the efficiency concept cannot provide a sufficient rationale for explaining the origins of private property. Additionally, some recent developments of North's thought are critically scrutinised, showing that his theoretical apparatus could be conceived as a paradise for the eclectic. Further, the role of the state in different versions of the theory of property rights – with a special reference to North's treatment of the notion of state – is, also, critically examined. Although North’s work has virtues compared to the ‘naïve model’ of property rights by recognising and addressing the role of the state and the issue of power in the formation of property rights and institutions, he does not succeed in fully accounting for the existence of institutional arrangements, due to his adherence to an individualist framework. |
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Keywords: | Property rights efficiency state social relations |
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