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Verlag: Puf, 2000
ISBN 10: 2130505368ISBN 13: 9782130505365
Anbieter: RECYCLIVRE, Paris, Frankreich
Buch
Zustand: Assez bon. Merci, votre achat aide à financer des programmes de lutte contre l'illettrisme.
Verlag: London, London School of Economic, Longmans, Green & Co., 1950., 1950
Anbieter: Bernard Quaritch Ltd ABA ILAB, London, Vereinigtes Königreich
Erstausgabe
8vo, pp. ix, [1 blank], 206; partially unopened, an excellent copy in the original red cloth, spine gilt.First edition. In British broadcasting, Coase scrutinizes the cogency of the arguments employed in order to justify the monopoly that existed in British broadcasting at the time under the B.B.C., 'broadcasting' of course referring to the 'wireless' radio and not to television. This followed debates in the late 1940s, under Attlee's Labour government, as to whether a monopoly was acceptable if the corporation in question served the public good. It is not Coases's contention that there should be no monopoly at all: 'this study is presented in the hope that it will be of assistance in any reasoned discussion of that question'. Ronald Coase received the Nobel Prize in Economics in 199 1.
Erscheinungsdatum: 1950
Anbieter: Maggs Bros. Ltd ABA, ILAB, PBFA, BA, London, Vereinigtes Königreich
Erstausgabe
First edition. 8vo. ix, [1], 206 pp. Original red cloth, spine lettered in gilt, dust jacket (spine panel slightly rubbed and toned, faint residue to front turn-in fold from old price sticker, otherwise a very good copy). London, Longmans, Green and Co., The London School of Economics and Political Science. The Nobel Prize winning economist Ronald Coase's first book-length publication, a study of British radio broadcasting in which Coase scrutinised the cogency of the arguments employed in order to justify the monopoly that existed in British broadcasting at the time under the BBC. Although Coase is most commonly associated with the Chicago School, he spent much of his early career at the London School of Economics where he undertook detailed studies on public utilities including the evolution of those institutions and the real-world factors that explained their structure. These studies showcased a formidable blend of regulatory analysis and economic history, and were motivated by 'real world' commercial issues or policy questions, paying careful attention to institutional arrangements and historical details such as legal rules and property rights.