The difficulty in defining a field for the so-called
institutional economics is the uncertainty of meaning of an institution.
Sometimes an institution seems to mean a framework of laws or natural
rights within which individuals act like inmates. Sometimes it seems to
mean the behavior of the inmates themselves. Sometimes anything
additional to or critical of the classical or hedonic economics is
deemed to be institutional. Sometimes anything that is "economic
behavior" is institutional. Sometimes anything that is "dynamic"
instead of "static," or a "process" instead of
commodities, or activity instead of feelings, or mass action instead of
individual action, or management instead of equilibrium, or control
instead of laissez faire, seems to be institutional economics.
All of these notions are doubtless involved in
institutional economics, but they may be said to be metaphors or
descriptions, whereas, a science of economic behavior requires analysis
into similarities of cause, effect or purpose, and a synthesis in a
unified system of principles. And institutional economics, furthermore,
cannot separate itself from the marvelous discoveries and insight of the
classical and psychological economists. It should incorporate, however,
in addition, the equally important insight of the communistic,
anarchistic, syndicalistic, fascistic, co-operative and unionistic
economists. Doubtless it is the effort to cover by enumeration all of
these unco-ordinated activities of the various schools which gives to
the name institutional economics that reputation of a miscellaneous,
nondescript yet merely descriptive, character of so-called "economic
behavior," which has long since relegated the crude Historical
School.
If we endeavor to find a universal circumstance,
common to all behavior known as institutional, we may define an
institution as collective action in control, liberation and expansion of
individual action.
Collective action ranges all the way from
unorganized custom to the many organized going concerns, such as the
family, the corporation, the trade association, the trade union, the
reserve system, the state. The principle common to all of them is
greater or less control, liberation and expansion of individual action
by collective action.
This control of the acts of one individual always
results in, and is intended to result in, a gain or loss to another or
other individuals. If it be the enforcement of a contract, then the debt
is exactly equal to the credit created for the benefit of the other
person. A debt is a duty enforced collectively, while the credit is a
corresponding right created by creating the duty. The resulting social
relation is an economic status, consisting of the expectations towards
which each party is directing his economic behavior. On the debt and
duty side it is the status of conformity to collective action. On the
credit and right side it is a status of security created by the
expectation of the said conformity. This is known as "incorporeal"
property.
Or, the collective control takes the form of a tabu
or prohibition of certain acts, such as acts of interference,
infringement, trespass; and this prohibition creates an economic status
of liberty for the person thus made immune. But the liberty of one
person may be accompanied by prospective gain or loss to a correlative
person, and the economic status thus created is exposure to the liberty
of the other. An employer is exposed to the liberty of the employee to
work or not to work, and the employee is exposed to the liberty of the
employer to hire or fire. The typical case of liberty and exposure is
the goodwill of a business. This is coming to be distinguished as "intangible"
property.
Either the state, or a corporation, or a cartel, or
a holding company, or a co-operative association, or a trade union, or
an employers' association, or a trade association, or a joint trade
agreement of two associations, or a stock exchange, or a board of trade,
may lay down and enforce the rules which determine for individuals this
bundle of correlative and reciprocal economic relationships. Indeed,
these collective acts of economic organizations are at times more
powerful than the collective action of the political concern, the state.
Stated in the language of ethics and law, to he
developed below, all collective acts establish relations of rights,
duties, no rights and no duties. Stated in the language of individual
behavior, what they require is performance, avoidance, forbearance by
individuals. Stated in the language of the resulting economic status of
individuals, what they provide is security, conformity, liberty and
exposure. Stated in language of cause, effect or purpose, the common
principles running through all of them are the principles of scarcity,
efficiency, futurity, the working rules of collective action and the
limiting and complementary factors of economic theory. Stated in
language of the operation of working rules on individual action, they
are expressed by the auxiliary verbs of what the individual can, cannot,
must, must not, may or may not do. He "can" or "cannot,"
because collective action will or will not come to his aid. He "must"
or "must not," because collective action will compel him. He "may,"
because collective action will permit him and protect him. He "may
not," because collective action will prevent him.
It is because of these volitional auxiliary verbs
that the familiar term "working rules" is appropriate to
indicate the universal principle of cause, effect or purpose, common to
all collective action. Working rules are continually changing in the
history of an institution, and they differ for different institutions;
but, whatever their differences, they have this similarity that they
indicate what individuals can, must, or may, do or not do, enforced by
collective sanctions.
Analysis of these collective sanctions furnishes
that correlation of economics, jurisprudence and ethics which is
prerequisite to a theory of institutional economics. David Hume found
the unity of these thee social sciences in the principle of scarcity and
the resulting conflict of interests, contra to Adam Smith who isolated
economics from the others on assumptions of divine providence, earthly
abundance and the resulting harmony of interests. Institutional
economics goes back to Hume. Taking our cue from Hume and the modern use
of such a term as "business ethics," ethics deals with the
rules of conduct arising from conflict of interests, arising, in turn,
from scarcity and enforced by the moral sanctions of collective opinion;
but economics deals with the same rules of conduct enforced by the
collective economic sanctions of profit or loss in case of obedience or
disobedience, while jurisprudence deals with the same rules enforced by
the organized sanctions of violence. Institutional economics is
continually dealing with the relative merits and efficiency of these
three types of sanctions.
From this universal principle of collective action
in control, liberation and expansion of individual action arise not only
the ethical concepts of rights and duties and the economic concepts of
security, conformity, liberty and exposure, but also of assets and
liabilities. In fact, it is from the field of corporation finance, with
its changeable assets and liabilities, rather than from the field of
wants and labor, or pains and pleasures, or wealth and happiness, or
utility and disutility, that institutional economics derives a large
part of its data and methodology. Institutional economics is the assets
and liabilities of concerns, contrasted with Adam Smith's Wealth of
Nations.
But collective action is even more universal in the
unorganized form of custom than it is in the organized form of concerns.
Custom has not given way to free contract and competition, as was
asserted by Sir Henry Maine. Customs have merely changed with changes in
economic conditions, and they may to-day be even more mandatory than the
decrees of a dictator, who perforce is compelled to conform to them. The
business man who refuses or is unable to make use of the modern customs
of the credit system, by refusing to accept or issue checks on solvent
banks, although they are merely private arrangements and not legal
tender, simply cannot continue in business by carrying on transactions.
These instruments are customary tender, instead of legal tender, backed
by the powerful sanctions of profit, loss and competition, which compel
conformity. Other mandatory customs might be mentioned, such as coming
to work at seven o'clock and quitting at six.
If disputes arise, then the officers of an
organized concern -- a credit association, the manager of a corporation,
a stock exchange, a board of trade, a commercial or labor arbitrator, or
finally the courts of law up to the Supreme Court of the United States
-- reduce the custom to precision by adding an organized sanction.
This is the common-law method of making law by the
decision of disputes. The decisions, by becoming precedents, become the
working rules, for the time being, of the particular organized concern.
The historic "common law" of Anglo-American jurisprudence is
only a special case of the universal principle common to all concerns
that survive, of making new law by deciding conflicts of interest, and
thus giving greater precision and organized compulsion to the
unorganized working rules of custom. The common-law method is universal
in all collective action, but the technical "common law" of
the lawyers is a body of decisions. In short, the common-law method is
itself a custom, with variabilities, like other customs. It is the way
collective action acts on individual action in time of conflict.
Thus collective action is more than control of
individual action -- it is, by the very act of control, as indicated by
the aforesaid auxiliary verbs, a liberation of individual action from
coercion, duress, discrimination, or unfair competition by other
individuals.
And collective action is more than control and
liberation of individual action -- it is expansion of the will of the
individual far beyond what he can do by his own puny acts. The head of a
great corporation gives orders whose obedience, enforced by collective
action, executes his will at the ends of the earth.
Thus an institution is collective action in
control, liberation and expansion of individual action.
These individual actions are really trans-actions
instead of either individual behavior or the "exchange" of
commodities. It is this shift from commodities and individuals to
transactions and working rules of collective action that marks the
transition from the classical and hedonic schools to the institutional
schools of economic thinking. The shift is a change in the ultimate unit
of economic investigation. The classic and hedonic economists, with
their communistic and anarchistic offshoots, founded their theories on
the relation of man to nature, but institutionalism is a relation of man
to man. The smallest unit of the classic economists was a commodity
produced by labor. The smallest unit of the hedonic economists was the
same or similar commodity enjoyed by ultimate consumers. One was the
objective side, the other the subjective side, of the same relation
between the individual and the forces of nature. The outcome, in either
case, was the materialistic metaphor of an automatic equilibrium,
analogous to the waves of the ocean, but personified as "seeking
their level." But the smallest unit of the institutional economists
is a unit of activity -- a transaction, with its participants.
Transactions intervene between the labor of the classic economists and
the pleasures of the hedonic economists, simply because it is society
that controls access to the forces of nature, and transactions are, not
the "exchange of commodities," but the alienation and
acquisition, between individuals, of the rights of property and liberty
created by society, which must therefore be negotiated between the
parties concerned before labor can produce, or consumers can consume, or
commodities be physically exchanged.
Transactions, as derived from a study of economic
theories and of the decisions of courts, may be reduced to thee economic
activities, distinguishable as bargaining transactions, managerial
transactions and rationing transactions. The participants in each of
them are controlled and liberated by the working rules of the particular
type of moral, economic or political concern in question. The bargaining
transaction derives from the familiar formula of a market, which, at the
time of negotiation, before goods are exchanged, consists of the best
two buyers and the best two sellers on that market. The others are
potential. Out of this formula arise four relations of possible conflict
of interest, on which the decisions of courts have built four classes of
working rules.
(1) The two buyers are competitors and the two
sellers are competitors, from whose competition the courts, guided by
custom, have constructed the long line of rules on fair and unfair
competition.
(2) One of the buyers will buy from one of the
sellers, and one of the sellers will sell to one of the buyers, and, out
of this economic choice of opportunities, both custom and the courts
have constructed the rules of equal or unequal opportunity, which, when
reduced to decisions of disputes, become the collective rules of
reasonable and unreasonable discrimination. (3) At the close of the
negotiations, one of the sellers, by
operation of law, transfers title to one of the
buyers, and one of the buyers transfers title to money or a credit
instrument to one of the sellers. Out of this double alienation and
acquisition of title arises the issue of equality or inequality of
bargaining power, whose decisions create the rules of fair and unfair
price, or reasonable and reasonable value.
(4) But even the decisions themselves on these
disputes, or the legislative or administrative rules prescribed to guide
the decisions, may be called in question, under the American System, by
an appeal to the Supreme Court, on the ground that property or liberty
has been "taken" by the governing or judicial authority "without
due process of law." Due process of law is the working rule of the
Supreme Court for the time being, which changes with changes in custom
and class dominance, or with changes in judges, or changes in the
opinions of judges, or with changes in the customary meanings of
property and liberty.
Hence the four economic issues arising out of that
unit of activity, the bargaining transaction, are competition,
discrimination, economic power and working rules.
The habitual assumption back of the decisions in
the foregoing classes of disputes is the assumption of equality of
willing buyers and willing sellers in the bargaining transactions by
which the ownership of wealth is transferred by operation of law. Here
the universal principle is scarcity.
But the assumption back of managerial transactions,
by which the wealth itself is produced, is that of superior and
inferior. Here the universal principle is efficiency, and the relation
is between two parties, instead of the four parties of the bargaining
transaction. The master, or manager, or foreman, or other executive,
gives orders -- the servant or workman or other subordinate must obey.
Yet a change in working rules, in course of time, as modified by the new
collective action of court decisions, may distinguish between reasonable
and unreasonable commands, willing and unwilling obedience.
Finally the rationing transactions differ from
managerial transactions in that the superior is a collective superior
while the inferiors are individuals. Familiar instances are the
log-rolling activities of a legislature in matters of taxation and
tariff; the decrees of communist or fascist dictatorships; the
budget-making of a corporate board of directors; even the decisions of a
court or arbitrator; all of which consist in rationing either wealth or
purchasing power to subordinates without bargaining, although the
negotiations are sometimes mistaken for bargaining, and without
managing, which is left to executives. They involve negotiation, indeed,
but in the form of argument, pleading, or eloquence, because they come
under the rule of command and obedience instead of the rule of equality
and liberty. On the borderline are partnership agreements which ration
to the partners the benefits and burdens of a joint enterprise. These
rationing transactions, likewise, in the American system, are subject
finally to the working rules (due process of law) of the Supreme Court.
In all cases we have variations and hierarchies of
the universal principle of collective action controlling, liberating and
expanding individual action in all the economic transactions of
bargaining, managing and rationing.
Since institutional economics is behavioristic, and
the behavior in question is none other than the behavior of individuals
while participating in transactions, institutional economics must make
an analysis of the economic behavior of individuals. The peculiar
quality of the human will in all its activities, distinguishing
economics from the physical sciences, is that of choosing between
alternatives. The choice may be voluntary, or it may be an involuntary
choice imposed by another individual or by collective action. In any
case the choice is the whole mind and body in action -- that is, the
will -- whether it he physical action and reaction with nature's forces,
or the economic activity of mutually inducing others in the transaction.
Every choice, on analysis, turns out to be a
three-dimensional act, which, as may be derived from the issues arising
in disputes, is at one and the same time, a performance, an avoidance,
and a forbearance. Performance is the exercise of power over nature or
others; avoidance is its exercise in one direction rather than the next
available direction; while forbearance is the exercise, not of the total
power except at a crisis, but the exercise of a limited degree of one's
possible moral, physical or economic power. Thus forbearance is the
limit placed on performance; performance is the actual performance; and
avoidance is the alternative performance rejected or avoided -- all at
one and the same point of time.
It is from forbearance that the doctrine of
reasonableness arises, while performance means either rendering a
service, compelling a service, or paying a debt, but avoidance is
non-interference with the performance, forbearance or avoidance of
others. Each may be a duty or a liberty, with a corresponding right or
exposure of others, and each may be enforced, permitted, or limited by
collective action according to the then working rules of the particular
concern.
If institutional economics is volitional it
requires an institutional psychology to accompany it. This is the
psychology of transactions, which may properly be named negotiational
psychology. Nearly all historic psychologies are individualistic, since
they are concerned with the relation of individuals to nature, or to
other individuals, treated, however, not as citizens with rights, but as
objects of nature without rights or duties. This is true all the way
from Locke's copy psychology, Berkeley's idealistic psychology, Hume's
skeptical psychology, Bentham's pleasure-pain psychology, the hedonistic
marginal utility psychology, James' pragmatism, Watson's behaviorism,
and the recent Gestalt psychology. All are individualistic. Only Dewey's
is socialistic. But the psychology of transactions is the psychology of
negotiations. Each participant is endeavoring to influence the other
towards performance, forbearance or avoidance. Each modifies the
behavior of the other in greater or less degree. This is the psychology
of business, of custom, of legislatures, of courts, of trade
associations, of trade unions. In popular language it resolves into the
persuasions or coercions of bargaining transactions, the commands and
obedience of managerial transactions, or the arguments and pleadings of
rationing transactions. All of these are negotiational psychology. It
may be observed that they are a behavioristic psychology.
But these are only names and descriptions. A
scientific understanding of negotiational psychology resolves it into
the smallest number of general principles, that is, similarities of
cause, effect or purpose, to be found in all transactions, but in
varying degree. First is the personality of participants, which, instead
of the assumed equality of economic theory, is all the differences among
individuals in their powers of inducement and their responses to
inducements and sanctions.
Then are the similarities and differences of
circumstance in which personalities are placed. First is scarcity or
abundance of alternatives. This is inseparable from efficiency, or the
capacity to bring events to happen. In all cases negotiations are
directed towards future time, the universal principle of futurity.
Working rules are always taken into account, since they are the
expectations of what the participants can, must or may do or not do, as
controlled, liberated or expanded by collective action. Then, in each
transaction is always a limiting factor whose control by the sagacious
negotiator, salesman, manager or politician, will determine the outcome
of complementary factors in the immediate or remote future.
Thus negotiational psychology is the transactional
psychology which offers inducements and sanctions according to the
variable personalities and the present circumstances of scarcity,
efficiency, expectation, working rules and limiting factors.
Historically this transactional psychology may he
seen to have changed, and is changing continuously, so that the whole
philosophies of capitalism, fascism or communism are variabilities of
it. In the common-law decisions it is the changing distinctions between
persuasion and coercion or duress, persuasion being considered the
outcome of a reasonable status of either equality of opportunity, or
fair competition, or equality of bargaining power, or due process of
law. But economic coercion and physical duress are denials of these
economic ideals, and nearly every case of economic conflict becomes an
assumption or investigation, under its own circumstances, of the
negotiational psychology of persuasion and coercion. Even the managerial
and rationing negotiations come under this rule of institutional change,
for the psychology of command and obedience is changed with changes in
the status of conformity, security, liberty or exposure. The modern "personnel"
management is an illustration of this kind of change in negotiational
psychology.
All of this rests on what may he distinguished as
three social relations implicit in every transaction, the relations of
conflict, dependence and order. The parties are involved in a conflict
of interests on account of the universal principle of scarcity. Yet they
depend on each other for reciprocal alienation and acquisition of what
the other wants but does not own. Then the working rule is not a
foreordained harmony of interests, as assumed in the hypotheses of
natural rights or mechanical equilibrium of the classical and hedonic
schools, but it actually creates, out of conflict of interests, a
workable mutuality and orderly expectation of property and liberty. Thus
conflict, dependence and order become the field of institutional
economics, builded upon the principles of scarcity, efficiency, futurity
and limiting factors derived from the older schools, but correlated
under the modern notions of working rules of collective action
controlling, liberating and expanding individual action.
What then becomes of the "exchange" of
physical commodities and the production of wealth, as well as the
consumption of wealth and satisfaction of wants by consumers, which
furnished the starting points of the classical, hedonic, communist and
other schools of economists? They are merely transferred to the future.
They become expectations of the immediate or remote future, secured by
the collective action, or "institution," of property and
liberty, and available only after the conclusion of a transaction.
Transactions are the means, under operation of law and custom, of
acquiring and alienating legal control of commodities, or legal control
of the labor and management that will produce and deliver or exchange
the commodities and services, forward to the ultimate consumers.
Institutional economics is not divorced from the
classical and psychological schools of economists -- it transfers their
theories to the future when goods will be produced or consumed or
exchanged as an outcome of present transactions. That future may be the
engineering economics of production of the classical economists or the
home economics of consumption of the hedonic economists, which depend on
physical control. But institutional economics is legal control of
commodities and labor, where the classical and hedonic theories dealt
only with physical control. legal control is future physical control.
Future physical control is the field of engineering and home economics.
Thus it may be seen how it was that the natural
rights ideas of the economists and lawyers created the illusion of a
framework, supposed to be constructed in the past, within which present
individuals are supposed to act. It was because they did not investigate
collective action. They assumed the fixity of existing rights of
property and liberty. But if rights, duties, liberties and exposures are
simply the changeable working rules of all kinds of collective action,
looking towards the future, then the framework analog disappears in the
actual collective action of controlling, liberating and expanding
individual action for the immediate or remote future production,
exchange, and consumption of wealth.
Consequently the final social philosophy, or "ism"
-- which is usually a belief regarding human nature and its goal --
towards which institutional economics trends is not something
foreordained by divine or natural "right," or materialistic
equilibrium, or "laws of nature" -- it may he communism,
fascism, capitalism. If managerial and rationing transactions are the
starting point of the philosophy, then the end is the command and
obedience of communism or fascism. If bargaining transactions are the
units of investigation then the trend is towards the equality of
opportunity, the fair competition, the equality of bargaining power, and
the due process of law of the philosophy of liberalism and regulated
capitalism. But there may be all degrees of combination, for the three
kinds of transactions are interdependent and variable in a world of
collective action and perpetual change, which is the uncertain future
world of institutional economics.