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Institutions, Institutional Change, and Economic Performance

TLDR
In this article, the authors examine the role that institutions, defined as the humanly devised constraints that shape human interaction, play in economic performance and how those institutions change and how a model of dynamic institutions explains the differential performance of economies through time.
Abstract
Examines the role that institutions, defined as the humanly devised constraints that shape human interaction, play in economic performance and how those institutions change and how a model of dynamic institutions explains the differential performance of economies through time. Institutions are separate from organizations, which are assemblages of people directed to strategically operating within institutional constraints. Institutions affect the economy by influencing, together with technology, transaction and production costs. They do this by reducing uncertainty in human interaction, albeit not always efficiently. Entrepreneurs accomplish incremental changes in institutions by perceiving opportunities to do better through altering the institutional framework of political and economic organizations. Importantly, the ability to perceive these opportunities depends on both the completeness of information and the mental constructs used to process that information. Thus, institutions and entrepreneurs stand in a symbiotic relationship where each gives feedback to the other. Neoclassical economics suggests that inefficient institutions ought to be rapidly replaced. This symbiotic relationship helps explain why this theoretical consequence is often not observed: while this relationship allows growth, it also allows inefficient institutions to persist. The author identifies changes in relative prices and prevailing ideas as the source of institutional alterations. Transaction costs, however, may keep relative price changes from being fully exploited. Transaction costs are influenced by institutions and institutional development is accordingly path-dependent. (CAR)

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The relationship among national institutional structures, economic factors, and domestic entrepreneurial activity: a multicountry study

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors draw on the construct of a country institutional profile to identify normative, cognitive, and regulatory institutional structures that may influence a country's entrepreneurial activity, and find that these three dimensions of the institutional profile, as well as economic factors such as per capita GDP, play distinct roles in promoting entrepreneurial activity in a country.

American Economic Association

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Path Dependence and New Technological Path Creation in the Danish Wind Power Industry

TL;DR: In this article, a hybrid socio-economic theory is proposed that examines the contributions of intelligent agents to the creation of new technological pathways in conditions of path dependence and explains the processes by which agents may collectively contribute to the emergence of new technologies and overcome the barriers confronting them as a result of the evolution of historical forces that establish the pathdependent trajectories of contemporary technologies.
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To formalize or not to formalize: Entrepreneurship and pro-market institutions

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors examine the effects of pro-market institutions on both formal and informal entrepreneurship and propose a method to measure, and compare, the effect of economic liberalization and governance levels.