Cambridge Home Awards   View basketHelp
  HomeNobel Laureates in Economic Sciences > Douglass C. North
 
 

2003 Clive W. J. Granger

2002 Daniel Kahneman

2002 Vernon L. Smith

2001 George A. Akerlof

2001 Joseph E. Stiglitz

1998 Amartya Sen

1996 William Vickrey

1993 Douglass C. North

1987 Robert M. Solow

1986 James M. Buchanan Jr.

1985 Franco Modigliani

1984 Sir Richard Stone

 
 
 
 

1993 - Douglass C. North

Empirical Studies in Institutional Change
Edited by Lee J. Alston, Thrainn Eggertsson, Douglass C. North

Empirical Studies in Institutional Change is a collection of nine empirical studies by fourteen scholars. Dealing with issues ranging from the evolution of secure markets in seventeenth-century England to the origins of property rights in airport slots in modern America, the contributors analyze institutions and institutional change. To make the papers accessible to a wide audience, the editors have written an introduction to each study and added three theoretical essays to the volume, including Douglass North's Nobel Prize address, that reflect their collective views as to the present and future status of institutional analysis.
Learn more

Institutions, Institutional Change and Economic Performance
Douglass C. North

Continuing his groundbreaking analysis of economic structures, Douglass North develops an analytical framework for explaining the ways in which institutions and institutional change affect the performance of economies, both at a given time and over time. Institutions exist, he argues, due to the uncertainties involved in human interaction; they are the constraints devised to structure that interaction. Yet, institutions vary widely in their consequences for economic performance; some economies develop institutions that produce growth and development, while others develop institutions that produce stagnation. North first explores the nature of institutions and explains the role of transaction and production costs in their development. The second part of the book deals with institutional change. Institutions create the incentive structure in an economy, and organizations will be created to take advantage of the opportunities provided within a given institutional framework. North argues that the kinds of skills and knowledge fostered by the structure of an economy will shape the direction of change and gradually alter the institutional framework. He then explains how institutional development may lead to a path-dependent pattern of development. In the final part of the book, North explains the implications of this analysis for economic theory and economic history. He indicates how institutional analysis must be incorporated into neo-classical theory and explores the potential for the construction of a dynamic theory of long-term economic change. Douglass C. North is Director of the Center of Political Economy and Professor of Economics and History at Washington University in St. Louis. He is a past president of the Economic History Association and Western Economics Association and a Fellow, American Academy of Arts and Sciences. He has written over sixty articles for a variety of journals and is the author of The Rise of the Western World: A New Economic History (CUP, 1973, with R.P. Thomas) and Structure and Change in Economic History (Norton, 1981). Professor North is included in Great Economists Since Keynes edited by M. Blaug (CUP, 1988 paperback ed.)
Learn more

  The Rise of the Western World
A New Economic History
Douglass C. North, Robert Paul Thomas

A radically new interpretation, offering a unified explanation for the growth of Western Europe between 900 A. D. and 1700, provides a general theoretical framework for institutional change geared to the general reader.
Learn more

 
 
 

  © Cambridge University Press 2003.