Property Rights and Property Law
HANDBOOK OF LAW AND ECONOMICS, Polinsky & Shavell, eds., Forthcoming
72 Pages Posted: 20 Aug 2004
Abstract
This chapter examines the economics of property rights and property law. It shows how the economics of property rights can be used to understand fundamental features of property law and related extra-legal institutions. The chapter examines both the rationale for legal doctrine, and the effects of legal doctrine regarding the exercise, enforcement, and transfer of rights. It also examines various property rights regimes including open access, private ownership, common property, and state property. The guiding questions are: How are property rights established? What explains the variation in the types of property rights? What governs the use and transfer of rights? And, how are property rights enforced? In answering these questions we argue that property rights and property law can be best understood as a system of societal rules designed to maximize social wealth. They do this by creating incentives for people to maintain and invest in assets, which leads to specialization and trade.
Keywords: Property rights, ownership, transaction costs, externality
JEL Classification: D23, D62, K11, K23
Suggested Citation: Suggested Citation
Do you have a job opening that you would like to promote on SSRN?
Recommended Papers
-
By Dean Lueck and Thomas J. Miceli
-
Property Rights and Liability Rules: The Ex Ante View of the Cathedral
-
The Economic Evolution of Petroleum Property Rights in the United States
By James L. Smith and Gary D. Libecap
-
Towards a Theory of Incomplete Property Rights
By Antonio Nicita, Matteo Rizzolli, ...
-
Optimal Delegation and Decoupling in the Design of Liability Rules
By Ian Ayres and Paul M. Goldbart
-
By Ian Ayres
-
By Abraham Bell and Gideon Parchomovsky