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Some Implications of Alternative Criteria for the Firm

In: The Corporate Economy

Author

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  • Robert M. Solow

Abstract

To avoid elementary misunderstanding, I ought to begin by saying that there is unlikely ever to be a simple answer to the question: What does a firm maximize? In the first place, a firm, especially a large firm, may be unable to maximize anything. Different depart­ments, different committees, different individuals may have different and even conflicting objectives which they pursue with a degree of success depending on a complicated balance of forces and personali­ties. In the second place, even if the firm does have a coherent objective or set of objectives — a utility function — it may be content with approximate solutions and rules of thumb. And in the third place, if the firm does actually maximize something, the thing that it maximizes in any concrete case is likely to be a very complicated quantity, depending on the relative strengths of many interests and persons — owners, managers, the government, public opinion — and on the character of the markets in which it operates. To understand the behaviour of a single complicated firm would be a combined operation in economics, sociology and psychiatry, and in the end the conclusions might not generalize very far, or at all.

Suggested Citation

  • Robert M. Solow, 1971. "Some Implications of Alternative Criteria for the Firm," Palgrave Macmillan Books, in: Robin Marris & Adrian Wood (ed.), The Corporate Economy, chapter 10, pages 318-342, Palgrave Macmillan.
  • Handle: RePEc:pal:palchp:978-1-349-01110-0_10
    DOI: 10.1007/978-1-349-01110-0_10
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    Citations

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    Cited by:

    1. Martin Feldstein & Jerry Green & Eytan Sheshinski, 1979. "Corporate Financial Policy and Taxation in a Growing Economy," The Quarterly Journal of Economics, President and Fellows of Harvard College, vol. 93(3), pages 411-432.
    2. Alexandre Chirat, 2021. "The correspondence between Baumol and Galbraith (1957–1958) An unsuspected source of managerial theories of the firm," EconomiX Working Papers 2021-35, University of Paris Nanterre, EconomiX.
    3. van de Klundert, Theo & Smulders, Sjak, 1995. "Strategies for Growth in a Macroeconomic Setting," The Manchester School of Economic & Social Studies, University of Manchester, vol. 63(4), pages 388-411, December.
    4. K. Narayanan, 2001. "Technology Acquisition and Growth of Firms Under Changing Policy Regimes: A Study of the Indian Automobile Sector," Working papers 93, Centre for Development Economics, Delhi School of Economics.
    5. Ramser, Hans Jürgen, 1976. "Unternehmungsziel, Marktstruktur und gesamtwirtschaftliches Wachstum," Discussion Papers, Series I 78, University of Konstanz, Department of Economics.
    6. Ramser, Hans Jürgen, 1975. "Neuere Ansätze in der Theorie der Firma und ihre wettbewerbspolitischen Implikationen," Discussion Papers, Series I 70, University of Konstanz, Department of Economics.

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