Coase, Ronald

Coase, Ronald

▪ British-American economist
in full  Ronald Harry Coase  
born December 29, 1910, Willesden, Middlesex, England

      British-born American economist who was awarded the Nobel Prize for Economics in 1991. The field known as new institutional economics, which attempts to explain political, legal, and social institutions in economic terms and to understand the role of institutions in fostering and impeding economic growth, originated in work by Coase and others.

      Coase attended the London School of Economics, where he received a bachelor of commerce degree in 1932 and a Ph.D. in economics in 1951. He was employed at various universities, including the London School of Economics (1935–51), the University of Buffalo, New York (1951–58), the University of Virginia, Charlottesville (1958–64), and the University of Chicago Law School, where he was professor of economics from 1964 and professor emeritus of economics and senior fellow in law and economics from 1982. He was editor of the Journal of Law and Economics from 1964 to 1982 and founding president of the International Society for New Institutional Economics from 1996 to 1997. From its creation in 2000 he served as research advisor to the Ronald Coase Institute, which promotes the study of new institutional economics.

      Coase did pioneering work on the ways in which transaction costs and property rights affect business and society. In his most famous paper, “The Problem of Social Cost” (1960), he developed what later became known as the Coase theorem. In the paper, Coase argued that nuisances are the product of joint causation and that, when information and transaction costs are low, the market will produce an efficient solution to the problem of nuisances without regard to where the law places the liability for the nuisance. His work was a call to legal scholars to consider the process of bargaining about rights outside the context of litigation. The Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences cited Coase for this research and also for “pioneering the study of how property rights are distributed among individuals by law, contract, and regulations, showing that this determines how economic decisions are made and whether they will succeed.”

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Universalium. 2010.

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  • Coase, Ronald (Harry) — born Dec. 29, 1910, Willesden, Middlesex, Eng. British U.S. economist. He received his doctorate from the London School of Economics and taught principally there and the University of Chicago. In his best known paper, The Problem of Social Cost… …   Universalium

  • Coase, Ronald (Harry) — (n. 29 dic. 1910, Willesden, Middlesex, Inglaterra). Economista británico estadounidense. Se doctoró en la London School of Economics. Fue docente en esa institución y también en la Universidad de Chicago. En su ensayo más conocido, El problema… …   Enciclopedia Universal

  • Ronald Coase — New institutional economics Born 29 December 1910 (1910 12 29) (age 100) …   Wikipedia

  • Ronald Coase — Naissance 29 décembre 1910 (1910 12 29) (100 ans) Willesden ( …   Wikipédia en Français

  • Ronald H. Coase — Ronald Coase Ronald Coase Naissance 29 décembre 1910 Willesden (  Royaume Uni) Nationalité Britannique …   Wikipédia en Français

  • Ronald Harry Coase — (* 29. Dezember 1910 in Willesden bei London) ist ein britischer Wirtschaftswissenschaftler. Er erhielt 1991 den Nobelpreis für Wirtschaftswissenschaften für „seine Entdeckung und Klärung der Bedeutung der sogenannten Transaktionskosten und der… …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • Coase — ist der Name von Ronald Coase, britischer Wirtschaftswissenschaftler, dem Coase Theorem, benannt nach Ronald Coase …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • Coase theorem — In law and economics, the Coase theorem (pronounced /ˈkoʊs/), attributed to Ronald Coase, describes the economic efficiency of an economic allocation or outcome in the presence of externalities. The theorem states that if trade in an externality… …   Wikipedia

  • Coase conjecture — The Coase conjecture, developed first by Ronald Coase, is an argument in monopoly theory. The conjecture sets up a situation in which a monopolist sells a durable good to a market where resale is impossible and faces consumers who all have… …   Wikipedia

  • Ronald — /ron ld/, n. a male given name: from Scandinavian words meaning counsel and rule. * * * (as used in expressions) Bochco Steven Ronald Coase Ronald Harry Colman Ronald Charles Fisher Sir Ronald Aylmer Haggard Merle Ronald Kitaj Ronald Brooks Laing …   Universalium

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