Adaptation, Specialization, and the Theory of the Firm: Foundations of the Resource-Based View

Author:   Birger Wernerfelt (Massachusetts Institute of Technology)
Publisher:   Cambridge University Press
ISBN:  

9781107134409


Pages:   324
Publication Date:   27 October 2016
Format:   Hardback
Availability:   In stock   Availability explained
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Adaptation, Specialization, and the Theory of the Firm: Foundations of the Resource-Based View


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Author:   Birger Wernerfelt (Massachusetts Institute of Technology)
Publisher:   Cambridge University Press
Imprint:   Cambridge University Press
Dimensions:   Width: 15.70cm , Height: 2.30cm , Length: 23.50cm
Weight:   0.590kg
ISBN:  

9781107134409


ISBN 10:   1107134404
Pages:   324
Publication Date:   27 October 2016
Audience:   Professional and scholarly ,  Professional & Vocational
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   In stock   Availability explained
We have confirmation that this item is in stock with the supplier. It will be ordered in for you and dispatched immediately.

Table of Contents

Preface; Part I. Agenda: 1. Introduction; 2. Preview: small forces, high frequencies, and large firms; Part II. The Main Argument: 3. Adaptation costs in one dimension: firms, contracts, and price lists; 4. Adaptation costs in three dimensions: firms, markets, and contracts; 5. All adaptations are not the same: the scope of firms and the size of markets; 6. Resources and the scope of the firm; Part III. Implications: 7. The allocation of asset ownership; 8. Communication within and between firms; 9. The power of incentives within and between firms; 10. Decision-making in large organizations; Part IV. Empirical Tests: 11. Bargaining costs: existence and sub-additivity; 12. Adaptation frequency and the boundary of the firm; 13. Asset ownership and externalities; Part V. Foundations: 14. Endogenously incomplete contracts; 15. Multiple equilibria and firm heterogeneity; 16. On the endogenous amplification of small differences; Part VI. Postscript: 17. Summary and final reflections; Index.

Reviews

'Birger Wernerfelt's work over the last thirty years has been enormously influential among management scholars but less so among economists. This book, which brings together and expands on many of Wernerfelt's papers, should redress the balance. Wernerfelt's theories of firms and organizations based on bargaining and adjustment costs are compelling and realistic, and economists have a great deal to learn from them.' Oliver Hart, Winner of the 2016 Nobel Peace Prize in Economic Sciences, and Andrew E. Furer Professor of Economics, Harvard University, Massachusetts 'Birger Wernerfelt is best known to management scholars as one of the key founders of strategy's dominant perspective, the resource-based view. However, Wernerfelt is also an extremely creative economist with a particular gift for building simple, rigorous, and very powerful models. As this book shows, his thinking on the nature of the firm has consistently evolved and developed into a unique perspective. It will be of direct relevance for scholars in fields such as strategy, organization theory, marketing and international business.' Nicolai J. Foss, Bocconi University, Italy 'For decades now, questions about the existence and performance of firms have been examined in largely separate literatures. Building on his contributions to the resource-based view and adaptation cost theory, Wernerfelt shows that to understand why firms exist we must also understand why some firms outperform others. What emerges is an integrated approach that explains both firm existence and performance differences, an approach that is likely to be very influential in strategic and economic research for some time to come.' Jay B. Barney, Presidential Professor of Strategic Management, Eccles School of Business, University of Utah 'This important book unifies two strands of Birger Wernerfelt's research that have heretofore been known to mainly separate audiences. His 'Resource-Based View' (1984) is a classic contribution to management. In contrast, Wernerfelt's recent papers on the 'Adaptation-Cost Theory' of the firm contribute to the economics literature launched by Coase and deepened by decades of subsequent research. Remarkably ... the ACT not only motivates, develops and applies an important new source of exchange friction, it also provides the first unified account of the scope of firms, the size of markets, and the style of contracting - an impressive achievement and a high bar for future work. Most importantly, however, the RBV and the ACT can now be seen as two sides of the same coin; such dialogues and integrations between the management and economics literatures are enormously welcome. Robert S. Gibbons, Sloan Distinguished Professor of Management, Sloan School of Management, Massachusetts Institute of Technology 'Birger Wernerfelt's work over the last thirty years has been enormously influential among management scholars but less so among economists. This book, which brings together and expands on many of Wernerfelt's papers, should redress the balance. Wernerfelt's theories of firms and organizations based on bargaining and adjustment costs are compelling and realistic, and economists have a great deal to learn from them.' Oliver Hart, Winner of the 2016 Nobel Peace Prize in Economic Sciences, and Andrew E. Furer Professor of Economics, Harvard University, Massachusetts 'Birger Wernerfelt is best known to management scholars as one of the key founders of strategy's dominant perspective, the resource-based view. However, Wernerfelt is also an extremely creative economist with a particular gift for building simple, rigorous, and very powerful models. As this book shows, his thinking on the nature of the firm has consistently evolved and developed into a unique perspective. It will be of direct relevance for scholars in fields such as strategy, organization theory, marketing and international business.' Nicolai J. Foss, Bocconi University, Italy 'For decades now, questions about the existence and performance of firms have been examined in largely separate literatures. Building on his contributions to the resource-based view and adaptation cost theory, Wernerfelt shows that to understand why firms exist we must also understand why some firms outperform others. What emerges is an integrated approach that explains both firm existence and performance differences, an approach that is likely to be very influential in strategic and economic research for some time to come.' Jay B. Barney, Presidential Professor of Strategic Management, Eccles School of Business, University of Utah 'This important book unifies two strands of Birger Wernerfelt's research that have heretofore been known to mainly separate audiences. His 'Resource-Based View' (1984) is a classic contribution to management. In contrast, Wernerfelt's recent papers on the 'Adaptation-Cost Theory' of the firm contribute to the economics literature launched by Coase and deepened by decades of subsequent research. Remarkably ... the ACT not only motivates, develops and applies an important new source of exchange friction, it also provides the first unified account of the scope of firms, the size of markets, and the style of contracting - an impressive achievement and a high bar for future work. Most importantly, however, the RBV and the ACT can now be seen as two sides of the same coin; such dialogues and integrations between the management and economics literatures are enormously welcome. Robert S. Gibbons, Sloan Distinguished Professor of Management, Sloan School of Management, Massachusetts Institute of Technology


'This important book unifies two strands of Birger Wernerfelt's research that have heretofore been known to mainly separate audiences. His 'Resource-Based View' (1984) is a classic contribution to management. In contrast, Wernerfelt's recent papers on the 'Adaptation-Cost Theory' of the firm contribute to the economics literature launched by Coase and deepened by decades of subsequent research. Remarkably the ACT not only motivates, develops and applies an important new source of exchange friction, it also provides the first unified account of the scope of firms, the size of markets, and the style of contracting - an impressive achievement and a high bar for future work. Most importantly, however, the RBV and the ACT can now be seen as two sides of the same coin; such dialogues and integrations between the management and economics literatures are enormously welcome. Robert S. Gibbons, Sloan Distinguished Professor of Management, Sloan School of Management, Massachusetts Institute of Technology


'Birger Wernerfelt's work over the last thirty years has been enormously influential among management scholars but less so among economists. This book, which brings together and expands on many of Wernerfelt's papers, should redress the balance. Wernerfelt's theories of firms and organizations based on bargaining and adjustment costs are compelling and realistic, and economists have a great deal to learn from them.' Oliver Hart, Winner of the 2016 Nobel Peace Prize in Economic Sciences, and Andrew E. Furer Professor of Economics, Harvard University, Massachusetts 'Birger Wernerfelt is best known to management scholars as one of the key founders of strategy's dominant perspective, the resource-based view. However, Wernerfelt is also an extremely creative economist with a particular gift for building simple, rigorous, and very powerful models. As this book shows, his thinking on the nature of the firm has consistently evolved and developed into a unique perspective. It will be of direct relevance for scholars in fields such as strategy, organization theory, marketing and international business.' Nicolai J. Foss, Bocconi University, Italy 'For decades now, questions about the existence and performance of firms have been examined in largely separate literatures. Building on his contributions to the resource-based view and adaptation cost theory, Wernerfelt shows that to understand why firms exist we must also understand why some firms outperform others. What emerges is an integrated approach that explains both firm existence and performance differences, an approach that is likely to be very influential in strategic and economic research for some time to come.' Jay B. Barney, Presidential Professor of Strategic Management, Eccles School of Business, University of Utah 'This important book unifies two strands of Birger Wernerfelt's research that have heretofore been known to mainly separate audiences. His 'Resource-Based View' (1984) is a classic contribution to management. In contrast, Wernerfelt's recent papers on the 'Adaptation-Cost Theory' of the firm contribute to the economics literature launched by Coase and deepened by decades of subsequent research. Remarkably ... the ACT not only motivates, develops and applies an important new source of exchange friction, it also provides the first unified account of the scope of firms, the size of markets, and the style of contracting - an impressive achievement and a high bar for future work. Most importantly, however, the RBV and the ACT can now be seen as two sides of the same coin; such dialogues and integrations between the management and economics literatures are enormously welcome. Robert S. Gibbons, Sloan Distinguished Professor of Management, Sloan School of Management, Massachusetts Institute of Technology


Author Information

Birger Wernerfelt is the J. C. Penney Professor of Management at the Sloan School of Management, Massachusetts Institute of Technology.

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