{"title":"自由市场中的信任是如何被滥用的:安然的“弯曲”E","authors":"W. Black","doi":"10.2139/ssrn.1536532","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"A market can have a lemon's problem when one party to the transaction has far superior information to the other and defects are not obvious. The classic bad car, the \"lemon\" led to the name for this theory. A lemon's market is inefficient. Both consumers and reputable sellers of high quality goods are harmed by the consumer's inability to distinguish superior goods. Frauds, who sell poor quality goods by misrepresenting quality are the only winners. Markets beset by lemon's problems may be improved by government intervention, which can aid both consumers and honest sellers.In his article \"How Trust is Achieved in Free Markets,\" Dan Klein, a libertarian, argues that government intervention is not necessary to deal with lemon's problems because the markets do so. A variant of Dan's reasoning lies at the heart of modern corporate governance. Its leading scholars assert that fraud by controlling persons is minimal because legitimate firms successfully distinguish themselves from control frauds. They do so through three primary devices: hiring top-tier outside auditors, insuring that their CEOs own large amounts of the company's stock, and having the company take on large amounts of debt. The S&L debacle and the ongoing financial crises have shown that this confidence in the ability of markets to discern control frauds was misplaced.White-collar criminologists are less sanguine about the ability of honest firms to distinguish themselves from the control frauds in many contexts absent effective regulation. Fraud always involves the creation and abuse of trust. Fraudulent firms love it when legitimate firms adopt signaling devices that they can mimic. This creates greater trust and allows more lucrative fraud. Moral restraints and legal prohibitions, in a functional, representative government, are generally mutually supportive. They can also support, instead of supplant, voluntary agreement.","PeriodicalId":142664,"journal":{"name":"LSN: Other Regulation that Pertains to Consumer Markets (Sub-Topic)","volume":"90 1","pages":"0"},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2010-01-14","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"1","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"How Trust is Abused in Free Markets: Enron’s 'Crooked 'E’'\",\"authors\":\"W. Black\",\"doi\":\"10.2139/ssrn.1536532\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"A market can have a lemon's problem when one party to the transaction has far superior information to the other and defects are not obvious. The classic bad car, the \\\"lemon\\\" led to the name for this theory. A lemon's market is inefficient. Both consumers and reputable sellers of high quality goods are harmed by the consumer's inability to distinguish superior goods. Frauds, who sell poor quality goods by misrepresenting quality are the only winners. Markets beset by lemon's problems may be improved by government intervention, which can aid both consumers and honest sellers.In his article \\\"How Trust is Achieved in Free Markets,\\\" Dan Klein, a libertarian, argues that government intervention is not necessary to deal with lemon's problems because the markets do so. A variant of Dan's reasoning lies at the heart of modern corporate governance. Its leading scholars assert that fraud by controlling persons is minimal because legitimate firms successfully distinguish themselves from control frauds. They do so through three primary devices: hiring top-tier outside auditors, insuring that their CEOs own large amounts of the company's stock, and having the company take on large amounts of debt. The S&L debacle and the ongoing financial crises have shown that this confidence in the ability of markets to discern control frauds was misplaced.White-collar criminologists are less sanguine about the ability of honest firms to distinguish themselves from the control frauds in many contexts absent effective regulation. Fraud always involves the creation and abuse of trust. Fraudulent firms love it when legitimate firms adopt signaling devices that they can mimic. This creates greater trust and allows more lucrative fraud. Moral restraints and legal prohibitions, in a functional, representative government, are generally mutually supportive. 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引用次数: 1
摘要
当交易的一方拥有比另一方优越得多的信息,而缺陷并不明显时,市场就会出现柠檬问题。经典的坏车“柠檬”导致了这个理论的名称。柠檬市场是低效的。消费者和信誉良好的优质商品销售者都因消费者无法区分优质商品而受到损害。通过谎报质量来销售劣质商品的骗子是唯一的赢家。受柠檬问题困扰的市场可能会通过政府干预得到改善,这对消费者和诚实的卖家都有好处。自由主义者丹·克莱因(Dan Klein)在他的文章《信任如何在自由市场中获得》(How Trust is achieve In Free Markets)中指出,政府干预对于解决柠檬的问题是不必要的,因为市场会这样做。丹的推理的另一种变体是现代公司治理的核心。它的主要学者断言,控制人的欺诈行为是最小的,因为合法公司成功地将自己与控制欺诈区分开来。他们通过三个主要手段来做到这一点:聘请顶级外部审计师,确保ceo拥有公司的大量股票,以及让公司承担大量债务。储贷危机和目前的金融危机表明,这种对市场识别控制欺诈能力的信心是错误的。在许多缺乏有效监管的情况下,白领犯罪学家对诚实公司将自己与控制欺诈区分开来的能力不太乐观。欺诈总是涉及信任的建立和滥用。当合法公司采用他们可以模仿的信号设备时,欺诈公司就会乐在其中。这创造了更大的信任,并允许更多有利可图的欺诈。在一个有效的代议制政府中,道德约束和法律禁止通常是相互支持的。它们还可以支持自愿协议,而不是取代自愿协议。
How Trust is Abused in Free Markets: Enron’s 'Crooked 'E’'
A market can have a lemon's problem when one party to the transaction has far superior information to the other and defects are not obvious. The classic bad car, the "lemon" led to the name for this theory. A lemon's market is inefficient. Both consumers and reputable sellers of high quality goods are harmed by the consumer's inability to distinguish superior goods. Frauds, who sell poor quality goods by misrepresenting quality are the only winners. Markets beset by lemon's problems may be improved by government intervention, which can aid both consumers and honest sellers.In his article "How Trust is Achieved in Free Markets," Dan Klein, a libertarian, argues that government intervention is not necessary to deal with lemon's problems because the markets do so. A variant of Dan's reasoning lies at the heart of modern corporate governance. Its leading scholars assert that fraud by controlling persons is minimal because legitimate firms successfully distinguish themselves from control frauds. They do so through three primary devices: hiring top-tier outside auditors, insuring that their CEOs own large amounts of the company's stock, and having the company take on large amounts of debt. The S&L debacle and the ongoing financial crises have shown that this confidence in the ability of markets to discern control frauds was misplaced.White-collar criminologists are less sanguine about the ability of honest firms to distinguish themselves from the control frauds in many contexts absent effective regulation. Fraud always involves the creation and abuse of trust. Fraudulent firms love it when legitimate firms adopt signaling devices that they can mimic. This creates greater trust and allows more lucrative fraud. Moral restraints and legal prohibitions, in a functional, representative government, are generally mutually supportive. They can also support, instead of supplant, voluntary agreement.