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Music : The Mamas and the Papas: Greatest Hits (1965-68)

Music : The Mamas and the Papas: Greatest Hits (1965-68). Aluminum: Mullett Briefs Face Down on Table Updated Assignment Sheet Posted Radium: Manning Briefs Now Due Friday Lunch Tuesday: BOYNE; EPSTEIN; MARGOLIS; McCARTHY; SCHWARZBERG; SEARNS; SHAFRIR. New Issue in Mullett: Escape.

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Music : The Mamas and the Papas: Greatest Hits (1965-68)

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  1. Music:The Mamas and the Papas: Greatest Hits (1965-68) • Aluminum: Mullett Briefs Face Down on Table • Updated Assignment Sheet Posted • Radium: Manning Briefs Now Due Friday • Lunch Tuesday: BOYNE; EPSTEIN; MARGOLIS; McCARTHY; SCHWARZBERG; SEARNS; SHAFRIR

  2. New Issue in Mullett: Escape • GENERALLY: WHEN DOES OWNER OF ESCAPED ANIMAL LOSE PROPERTY RIGHTS? • Why Different from Watch or Ring? • What Facts are Relevant?

  3. New Issue in Mullett: Escape • Different from First Possession (Where All 3 Cases Ask Similar Qs) • Escape Cases Focus on Different Concerns • Mullett: Applies English Common Law Rule • Manning: Fact-Specific Result Not Using English Common Law Test

  4. OXYGEN: DQ28 Assume that we are in a world where the net-owners have no enforceable rights in fish caught in their nets until they physically remove the fish from the nets. Thomas chooses to take fish from the owners’ nets.Who is affected by this decision?

  5. EXTERNALITIES • Cost or benefit external to a decision-making process • Must be w reference to particular decision • helpful to start by identifying decision maker • If decision-maker considers a cost, but chooses to absorb it, not an externality • E.g., Thomas considers own exertion necessary to take from nets, may decide to take anyway

  6. EXTERNALITIES • Likely Externalities in DQ28 Shaw hypo: • Costs to net-owners & their families • Loss of availability to purchasers from net-owners • Effects on net manufacturers • Effects on fish & food chain (might be benefits if net-fishing discouraged)

  7. EXTERNALITIES • “Internalizing” Externalities: Forcing Decision-Maker to Consider

  8. EXTERNALITIES • “Internalizing” Externalities: Forcing Decision-Maker to Consider • DQ30 (Krypton): Examples of Internalizing from Outside Reading?

  9. EXTERNALITIES • “Internalizing” Externalities: Forcing Decision-Maker to Consider • Beneficial Because Means Price of Activities Will Reflect Real Cost (e.g., pollution costs)

  10. EXTERNALITIES • “Internalizing” Externalities: Forcing Decision-Maker to Consider • Beneficial Because Means Price of Activities Will Reflect Real Cost • Can Internalize Several Ways • Require Payment of Damages • Criminalize Activity • Private Negotiotiation (Bribes)

  11. OXYGEN: DQ28 If the fish are worth more to the net-owners than to Thomas, presumably there is some amount of money they could contract to pay him to leave the fish alone that would leave all parties better off than before the contract.What obstacles stand in the way of the parties entering this contract?

  12. OXYGEN: DQ28 What obstacles stand in the way of the parties entering this contract? Assume cost to net-owner is $500/wk & benefit to Thomas is $300/wk. Assume One-on-One Negotiation.

  13. Costs of One-on-One Negotiation • Investigation Costs • Bargaining Costs • Strategic Behavior • Enforcement Costs

  14. OXYGEN: DQ28 What obstacles stand in the way of the parties entering this contract? Assume cost to net-owner is $500/wk & benefit to Thomas is $300/wk. Assume Multi-Party Negotiation.

  15. Additional Costs of Multi-Party Negotiation • Free-Riding • Holdouts • Organization/Management Costs

  16. Investigation Costs Bargaining Costs Strategic Behavior Enforcement Costs Free-Riding Holdouts Organization/Management Costs Collectively: “Transaction Costs”

  17. Transaction Costs Can Prevent Parties from Reaching Bargains that are “Efficient” (= Would Make Everyone Better Off)

  18. DQ32: Costs of Internalization? • costs of bargaining privately • costs of collectively creating new rules (can be very expensive) • multi-party negotiation • legislation

  19. Basic Demsetz Analysis: 1st Thesis • Identify decision at issue

  20. Basic Demsetz Analysis: 1st Thesis • Identify decision at issue • Identify old rule

  21. Basic Demsetz Analysis: 1st Thesis • Identify decision at issue • Identify old rule • Identify neg. externalities under old rule

  22. Basic Demsetz Analysis: 1st Thesis If cost of externalities > cost of change  change in rule

  23. Basic Demsetz Analysis: 1st Thesis • If cost of externalities > cost of change  change in rule • Rough Approximation (Not Precise Math)

  24. Basic Demsetz Analysis: 1st Thesis • If cost of externalities > cost of change  change in rule • Rough Approximation (Not Precise Math) • Resulting Change in Rule Unpredictable

  25. Basic Demsetz Analysis: 1st Thesis • If cost of externalities > cost of change  change in rule • Rough Approximation (Not Precise Math) • Resulting Change in Rule Unpredictable • Often Results from Social/Cultural Change • New Social Habits  Scarcity • New Science/Technology  Scarcity or Better Monitoring

  26. Basic Demsetz Analysis: 1st Thesis • Identify decision at issue • Identify old rule • Identify neg. externalities under old rule • Identify change in circumstances

  27. Basic Demsetz Analysis: 1st Thesis • Identify decision at issue • Identify old rule • Identify neg. externalities under old rule • Identify change in circumstances • Does change increase neg. externalities?

  28. Basic Demsetz Analysis: 1st Thesis • Identify decision at issue • Identify old rule • Identify neg. externalities under old rule • Identify change in circumstances • Does change increase neg. externalities? • If cost of externalities > cost of change  change in rule

  29. DQ33: Uranium: Apply to Montagne • Identify decision at issue • Identify old rule • Identify neg. externalities under old rule • Identify change in circumstances • Does change increase neg. externalities? • If cost of externalities > cost of change  change in rule

  30. DQ34: Uranium Why does the author believe that the tribes of the Southwestern U.S. did not adopt a system similar to that of the Montagne?

  31. DQ35: Uranium: Apply to Development of Air Pollution Regs • Identify decision at issue • Identify old rule • Identify neg. externalities under old rule • Identify change in circumstances • Does change increase neg. externalities? • If cost of externalities > cost of change  change in rule

  32. DQ35: Apply to Development of Sexual Harassment Regs • Identify decision at issue • Identify old rule • Identify neg. externalities under old rule • Identify change in circumstances • Does change increase neg. externalities? • If cost of externalities > cost of change  change in rule

  33. Demsetz Second Thesis Over Time, Process Described in 1st Thesis Leads to More and More Private Property

  34. Alternatives to Private Property • State of Nature: (Can Use Power to Exclude) • Communal Ownership • No one can exclude others • Often Variants on First in Time in Practice • Can Have Non-Communal State Ownership • e.g., Military Bases • Like Private Ppty BUT Gov’t Management

  35. Alternatives to Private Property • State of Nature: (Can Use Power to Exclude) • Communal Ownership • No one can exclude others • Often Variants on First in Time in Practice • Can Have Non-Communal State Ownership • e.g., Military Bases • Like Private Ppty BUT Gov’t Management • DQ36: Radium: Common Examples?

  36. Demsetz: Private Property More Efficient Than Communal Property • The members of the community will have trouble negotiating among themselves to achieve the optimal level of use of the resource.

  37. Demsetz: Private Property More Efficient Than Communal Property • The members of the community will have trouble negotiating among themselves to achieve the optimal level of use of the resource. • The members of the community will have trouble negotiating with other communities or outsiders to prevent interference with their rights and achieve useful bargains about allocating property rights.

  38. Demsetz: Private Property More Efficient Than Communal Property • The members of the community will have trouble negotiating among themselves to achieve the optimal level of use of the resource. • The members of the community will have trouble negotiating with other communities or outsiders to prevent interference with their rights and achieve useful bargains about allocating property rights. • DQ37: Radium: Examples?

  39. Demsetz Second Thesis Over Time, Process Described in 1st Thesis Leads to More and More Private Property

  40. DQ38: RADIUM In your experience, do communities have ways of preventing anti-community behavior aside from bargaining or paying off the anti-social community members? Examples?

  41. DQ38: RADIUM If bargaining among members of a community is so difficult, how do private property systems get created at all?

  42. WHAT TO TAKE FROM DEMSETZ • Externalities Important (Want Decision-Makers to Consider Real Costs)

  43. WHAT TO TAKE FROM DEMSETZ • Externalities Important • Useful Description of a Way Changes in Society Create Changes in Property Rights

  44. WHAT TO TAKE FROM DEMSETZ • Externalities Important • Useful Description of Changes in Property Rights • Arguments re Advantages of Private Property

  45. WHAT TO TAKE FROM DEMSETZ • Externalities Important • Useful Description of Changes in Property Rights • Advantages of Private Property • Description of What Property Is (1st para.) • Expectations re Rights to Act • Protection from Others’ Interference • Construct of Society/Culture

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