Bibliographie sélective OHADA

Explorez la bibliographie sélective OHADA de ressources Open Access en droit des affaires

Type de ressource
Auteurs/contributeurs
Titre
Cooperation Without Enforcement? A comparative analysis of litigation and online reputation as quality assurance mechanisms
Résumé
Online reputation mechanisms are emerging as a promising alternative to more established mechanisms for promoting trust and cooperative behavior, such as legally enforceable contracts. As information technology dramatically reduces the cost of accumulating, processing and disseminating consumer feedback, it is plausible to ask whether such mechanisms can provide an economically more efficient solution to a wide range of moral hazard settings where societies currently rely on the threat of litigation in order to induce cooperation. In this paper we compare online reputation to legal enforcement as institutional mechanisms in terms of their ability to induce cooperative behavior. Furthermore, we explore the impact of information technology on their relative economic efficiency. We find that although both mechanisms result in losses relative to the maximum possible social surplus, under certain conditions online reputation outperforms litigation in terms of maximizing the total surplus, and thus the resulting social welfar
N° du rapport
4295-03
Type de rapport
Working Paper
Lieu
Cambridge
Institution
Massachusetts Institute of Technology Sloan School of Management
Date
2003-04
Pages
33
Langue
EN
Titre abrégé
Cooperation Without Enforcement?
Référence
Bakos, Y., & Dellarocas, C. (2003). Cooperation Without Enforcement? A comparative analysis of litigation and online reputation as quality assurance mechanisms (Working Paper Nos. 4295–03; p. 33). Massachusetts Institute of Technology Sloan School of Management. https://dspace.mit.edu/bitstream/handle/1721.1/1850/4295-03.pdf