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<nettime> [RRE]notes and recommendations (excerpt: networks and markets) |
----- Forwarded [excerpt] Date: Sun, 26 Dec 1999 15:35:16 -0800 (PST) From: Phil Agre <pagre@alpha.oac.ucla.edu> To: "Red Rock Eater News Service" <rre@lists.gseis.ucla.edu> Subject: [RRE]notes and recommendations <...> Where did the association between computer networks and decentralized markets come from? With some authors, such as George Gilder, little in the way of a coherent argument joins them: they observe that modern digital networks put the computer power on your desk, not in the guts of the network, and so they suppose that social power will therefore become equally distributed (see, for example, Life After Television, Norton, 1992, pages 47-48, 126). But this hardly follows; while the basic architecture of the network is surely important in political terms, the architecture of the applications that run on it is more so (see, for example, Larry Lessig, Code and Other Laws of Cyberspace, Basic Books, 2000). A more common, more serious argument is economic. According to this argument, computer networks reduce the costs of doing business, this will improve the efficiency of markets, and as markets become more efficient hierarchical firms will wither away from competition and governments will become both unnecessary and impractical. In more technical terms, computer networks are said to reduce transaction costs: the costs of buying and selling things in the market. These transaction costs are likened to friction, and computer networks are supposed to reduce that friction to zero, thereby perfecting the market and dissolving all of the remaining "islands of conscious power" into a great sea of freely contracting individuals. This argument sounds compelling in the abstract, but it is actually quite false. To see this, it will help to return to the origin of the concept of transaction costs, Ronald Coase's paper "The nature of the firm" (Economica NS 4, 1937, pages 385-405; reprinted in Oliver E. Williamson and Sidney G. Winter, The Nature of the Firm: Origins, Evolution, and Development, Oxford University Press, 1991). Coase's paper asks a deep question: if the market is the most efficient way to organize economic activity, why do firms exist? Why aren't the activities that take place within the firm coordinated by markets? Why aren't these zones of hierarchical command obliterated through competition? The reason, Coase suggests, is that the mechanisms of the market have costs of their own. Buyers and sellers expend time, effort, and resources to find one another, negotiate a deal, enforce the deal, and so on. Coase refers to these costs as marketing costs, but they have come to be called transaction costs. And he suggests that firms arise when the costs of coordinating activity through them, which might be called organizing costs (the concept tellingly does not yet have a single widely accepted name), are less than the transaction costs of coordinating activity through the market. (For another view of the nature of the firm, one wholly compatible with my own argument below, see John Seely Brown and Paul Duguid, Organizing knowledge, California Management Review 40(3), 1998, pages 90-111.) Transaction costs are both numerous and diverse, and Coase's most sophisticated follower, Douglass North, has estimated that they amount to nearly half of the economy. This is amazing, given that the neoclassical theory of economics presupposes perfect markets and thus assumes that transaction costs do not exist. Framed in this way, Coase's theory would seem to suggest that markets would work better if transaction costs were reduced. And indeed a large and vigorous school of economic and legal theory has grown up around the idea. This "law and economics" school is predominantly conservative in its politics, inasmuch as reduced transaction costs would seem to obviate the need for government intervention to correct defects in the market. Law and economics scholars have been immensely influential, and they include some of the most prominent contemporary judges and legal scholars. Unfortunately for the law and economics school, and for the country whose legal system they have helped to shape, their entire project is based on a logical fallacy and a misinterpretation of Coase. The argument in Coase's paper is *not* that lower transaction costs imply a greater reliance upon the market and a lesser reliance on the firm. It is true that, on Coase's argument, an economy with zero transaction costs would behave according to the neoclassical ideal. But a world of zero transaction costs is surely impossible (not least because of the irreducible problems of market information), and when transaction costs are not zero, Coase's argument is much more complicated. We do see spectacular effects when new technologies enable intermediaries to operate on a wider geographic scale, thus reducing the transaction costs of long-distance trade and increasing the efficiency of markets. EBay is a good example. But as Burt Swanson once pointed out to me, and as Coase himself observes, technologies that reduce transaction costs usually reduce organizing costs as well. According to Coase, the size of firms is determined by a balance between the costs of coordinating activities in the market and the costs of coordinating the same activities within a firm. It is the comparison that matters, not the magnitude of one side or the other. Let us listen to Coase: Changes like the telephone and the telegraph which tend to reduce the cost of organizing spatially will tend to increase the size of the firm. All changes which improve managerial technique will tend to increase the size of the firm. There then follows an important footnote: It should be noted that most inventions will change both the costs of organizing and the costs of using the price mechanism. In such cases, whether the invention tends to make firms larger or smaller will depend on the relative effect on these two sets of costs. For instance, if the telephone reduces the costs of using the price mechanism more than it reduces the costs of organizing, then it will have the effect of reducing the size of the firm. So if we want to know what will happen to the economy as the Internet becomes widely adopted, we must compare the effects of Internet use on transaction costs to its effects on organizing costs. How can we make such a comparison? It would seem impossible, given the diversity of both kinds of costs and the difficulty of comparing them. But I would argue that the global economy is now experiencing extraordinary reductions in organizing costs, and that this effect swamps anything relating to transaction costs. Why? Consider the benefits to a firm from a cheap, pervasive digital communications network. These benefits are numerous, of course, but we need only focus on a single category: benefits associated with economies of scale. A computer network enables a firm to distribute the same information (product designs, policies, marketing materials, training materials, and so forth) to a vast number of locations for almost no marginal cost. It also enables a firm to gather information in a standardized format (sales figures, market information, customer surveys, and so forth) into a centralized organization for analysis and action. As the world becomes more homogenous -- shared tastes, language, infrastructure, weights and measures, currency, regulations, accounting standards, and so on -- the benefits of this informational circulatory system increase. A business can double the number of its branches with little or no change in the size of the central office. A competing firm with fewer branches will suffer a disadvantage; it will experience the same central-office costs, but will have fewer transactions over which to distribute them. The Internet might play a different role in a world of infinite diversity. But in the world we actually inhabit, the forces of homogeneity are operating at full fury. These include the globalization of media and culture, regional and global treaty organizations, the advantages of compatibility of technical standards, and the mutually reinforcing effects of economies of scale in a hundred industries. Thus, when the European Union introduced the euro as a common currency across several countries, the costs of running a business in several markets at once dropped substantially, leading to an unprecedented wave of cross-border mergers. In fact, I am not aware of any evidence that transaction costs as a proportion of the overall economy are falling *at all*. (Indeed, North suggests that they have been rising. See Douglass C. North and John J. Wallis, Integrating institutional change and technical change in economic history: A transaction cost approach, Journal of Institutional and Theoretical Economics 150(4), 1994, pages 609-624. They also observe that "the firm is not concerned with minimizing either transaction or transformation costs in isolation: the firm wants to minimize the total costs of producing and selling a given level of output with a given set of characteristics" (page 613).) Transaction costs are like highway safety: when highways become safer, people drive faster; when transaction costs are lowered, people engage in more complicated transactions. But when a firm doubles its number of branches, one can readily compute the reduction in organizing costs: the cost of running the central office are now distributed over twice as many transactions. If decreased organizing costs through economies of scale are the most important factor influencing changes in the economic role of firms, what follows? First, because economies of scale require a strong element of homogeneity, it follows that reduced transaction costs have a chance of making a firm smaller when dissimilar activities are being coordinated. This is one reason why firms sometimes break apart when they find themselves spanning two or more dissimilar markets. It is also where outsourcing comes from. An obstacle to outsourcing is the complexity of the contractual relationship, and communications technologies can be used to help manage the complexity, for example by connecting the parties' computerized accounting systems. Yet in many cases the main reason for outsourcing is *not* these transaction costs, but rather the economies of scale that the outsourcing firm itself can achieve. This leads us to the second consequence: far from conforming to Adam Smith's idealized market of individual artisans, the networked economy is organized mainly by large firms that enjoy vast economies of scale. These firms are then supplied by large numbers of small firms in conditions that approach monopsony, that is, competitive sellers facing a single buyer with overwhelming market power (see generally Bennett Harrison, Lean and Mean: The Changing Landscape of Corporate Power in the Age of Flexibility, Basic Books, 1994). Market power will flow to whichever firms control the intangible resources -- intellectual property, for example -- that fuel economies of scale in a given industry. As economies of scale become globalized, the result is a breathtaking concentration of power in a small number of firms, each of which controls a certain "slice" through the global economy (see Lowell Bryan, Jane Fraser, Jeremy Oppenheim, and Wilhelm Rall, Race for the World: Strategies to Build a Great Global Firm, Harvard Business School Press, 1999). Firms will not tend to be involved in diverse activities. Instead, they will choose one single activity and manage *all* of that activity throughout the world. This picture is emerging very rapidly and very clearly, and it is visible to anyone who reads the business pages and ignores the abstractions of the enthusiasts. <...> # distributed via <nettime>: no commercial use without permission # <nettime> is a moderated mailing list for net criticism, # collaborative text filtering and cultural politics of the nets # more info: majordomo@bbs.thing.net and "info nettime-l" in the msg body # archive: http://www.nettime.org contact: nettime@bbs.thing.net