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OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: Per BylundPublisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd Imprint: Routledge Volume: 1 Weight: 0.453kg ISBN: 9781138299979ISBN 10: 1138299979 Pages: 186 Publication Date: 23 October 2017 Audience: College/higher education , General/trade , Tertiary & Higher Education , General Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: In Print ![]() This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us. Table of ContentsIntroduction 1. What We Know and What We Don’t Know about the Firm 2. The Extent of the Market Process 3. The ‘Specialisation Deadlock’ 4. Entrepreneurship and Integration 5. Authority and Hierarchy 6. The Volatile Character of the Firm 7. Financing, Ownership and Boundaries of the Firm 8 The Firm as a Market Institution 9 The Nature of the Market Process 10 Policy Implications 11 What the Future HoldsReviews""The author succeeds in spotlighting the economic function provided by the firm—in place of the traditional view of starting with the conception of a firm —by first looking at the market and its limitations to production. Consequentially, this theory development adds an interesting twist to the attempts to understand the existence of firms."" - Erik Markin and Vishal Gupta, Organization Management Journal ""After reading The Problem of Production: A New Theory of the Firm, one no longer is inclined to ask the question about firm’s existence. A more proper question should be ""Why do markets exist?"" Bylund has made a compelling Austrian argument that makes the firm’s appearance even more fundamental than the market...So far, the most important Austrian contributions to the theory of the firm were made in significant articles in Klein and Foss (2012), where authors are building bridges by finding enlightening and eloquently Austrian themes in competing theories. Bylund’s book structure takes a more sweeping approach and builds his theory from scratch on Austrian foundations."" - Mateusz Machaj, Quarterly Journal of Austrian Economics ""I thoroughly enjoyed the book. I find it a fresh, coherent and consistent perspective in the idea of the firm and entrepreneurship. The main strength of Bylund’s book is the integration of theories of entrepreneurship, innovation, the firm, and the market processes...Overall, I consider Bylund’s monograph enlightening and would recommend it to people interested in economic theory but also managerial and strategic thinking. I also believe that it can be used as introduction into the topic."" - Henrique Schneider, The Review of Austrian Economics """The author succeeds in spotlighting the economic function provided by the firm—in place of the traditional view of starting with the conception of a firm —by first looking at the market and its limitations to production. Consequentially, this theory development adds an interesting twist to the attempts to understand the existence of firms."" - Erik Markin and Vishal Gupta, Organization Management Journal ""After reading The Problem of Production: A New Theory of the Firm, one no longer is inclined to ask the question about firm’s existence. A more proper question should be ""Why do markets exist?"" Bylund has made a compelling Austrian argument that makes the firm’s appearance even more fundamental than the market...So far, the most important Austrian contributions to the theory of the firm were made in significant articles in Klein and Foss (2012), where authors are building bridges by finding enlightening and eloquently Austrian themes in competing theories. Bylund’s book structure takes a more sweeping approach and builds his theory from scratch on Austrian foundations."" - Mateusz Machaj, Quarterly Journal of Austrian Economics ""I thoroughly enjoyed the book. I find it a fresh, coherent and consistent perspective in the idea of the firm and entrepreneurship. The main strength of Bylund’s book is the integration of theories of entrepreneurship, innovation, the firm, and the market processes...Overall, I consider Bylund’s monograph enlightening and would recommend it to people interested in economic theory but also managerial and strategic thinking. I also believe that it can be used as introduction into the topic."" - Henrique Schneider, The Review of Austrian Economics" The author succeeds in spotlighting the economic function provided by the firm-in place of the traditional view of starting with the conception of a firm -by first looking at the market and its limitations to production. Consequentially, this theory development adds an interesting twist to the attempts to understand the existence of firms. - Erik Markin and Vishal Gupta, Organization Management Journal The author succeeds in spotlighting the economic function provided by the firm-in place of the traditional view of starting with the conception of a firm -by first looking at the market and its limitations to production. Consequentially, this theory development adds an interesting twist to the attempts to understand the existence of firms. - Erik Markin and Vishal Gupta, Organization Management Journal After reading The Problem of Production: A New Theory of the Firm, one no longer is inclined to ask the question about firm's existence. A more proper question should be Why do markets exist? Bylund has made a compelling Austrian argument that makes the firm's appearance even more fundamental than the market...So far, the most important Austrian contributions to the theory of the firm were made in significant articles in Klein and Foss (2012), where authors are building bridges by finding enlightening and eloquently Austrian themes in competing theories. Bylund's book structure takes a more sweeping approach and builds his theory from scratch on Austrian foundations. - Mateusz Machaj, Quarterly Journal of Austrian Economics I thoroughly enjoyed the book. I find it a fresh, coherent and consistent perspective in the idea of the firm and entrepreneurship. The main strength of Bylund's book is the integration of theories of entrepreneurship, innovation, the firm, and the market processes...Overall, I consider Bylund's monograph enlightening and would recommend it to people interested in economic theory but also managerial and strategic thinking. I also believe that it can be used as introduction into the topic. - Henrique Schneider, The Review of Austrian Economics Author InformationPer L. Bylund is Records-Johnston Professor of Free Enterprise and Assistant Professor of Entrepreneurship, School of Entrepreneurship, Oklahoma State University, USA. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |