{"doi":"10.1111/j.1468-0335.1937.tb00002.x","title":"The Nature of the Firm","abstract":"Economic theory has suffered in the past from a failure to state clearly its assumptions. Economists in building up a theory have often omitted to examine the foundations on which it was erected. This examination is, however, essential not only to prevent the misunderstanding and needless controversy which arise from a lack of knowledge of the assumptions on which a theory is based, but also because of the extreme importance for economics of good judgment in choosing between rival sets of assumptions. For instance, it is suggested that the use of the word “firm” in economics may be different from the use of the term by the “plain man.”11 Joan Robinson, Economics is a Serious Subject, p. 12. Since there is apparently a trend in economic theory towards starting analysis with the individual firm and not with the industry,22 See N. Kaldor, “The Equilibrium of the Firm,”Economic Journal, March, 1934. it is all the more necessary not only that a clear definition of the word “firm” should be given but that its difference from a firm in the “real world,” if it exists, should be made clear. Mrs. Robinson has said that “the two questions to be asked of a set of assumptions in economics are : Are they tractable? and : Do they correspond with the real world?”33 Op. cit., p. 6. Though, as Mrs. Robinson points out, “more often one set will be manageable and the other realistic,” yet there may well be branches of theory where assumptions may be both manageable and realistic. It is hoped to show in the following paper that a definition of a firm may be obtained which is not only realistic in that it corresponds to what is meant by a firm in the real world, but is tractable by two of the most powerful instruments of economic analysis developed by Marshall, the idea of the margin and that of substitution, together giving the idea of substitution at the margin.11 J. M. Keynes, Essays in Biography, pp. 223–4. Our definition must, of course, “relate to formal relations which are capable of being conceived exactly.”22 L. Robbins, Nature and Significance of Economic Science, p. 63. It is convenient if, in searching for a definition of a firm, we first consider the economic system as it is normally treated by the economist. Let us consider the description of the economic system given by Sir Arthur Salter.33 This description is quoted with approval by D. H. Robertson, Control of Industry, p. 85, and by Professor Arnold Plant, “Trends in Business Administration,” Economica, February, 1932. It appears in Allied Shipping Control, pp. 16–17. “The normal economic system works itself. For its current operation it is under no central control, it needs no central survey. Over the whole range of human activity and human need, supply is adjusted to demand, and production to consumption, by a process that is automatic, elastic and responsive.” An economist thinks of the economic system as being co-ordinated by the price mechanism and society becomes not an organisation but an organism.44 See F. A. Hayek, “The Trend of Economic Thinking,” Economica, May, 1933. The economic system “works itself.” This does not mean that there is no planning by individuals. These exercise foresight and choose between alternatives. This is necessarily so if there is to be order in the system. But this theory assumes that the direction of resources is dependent directly on the price mechanism. Indeed, it is often considered to be an objection to economic planning that it merely tries to do what is already done by the price mechanism.55 See F. A. Hayek, op. cit. Sir Arthur Salter's description, however, gives a very incomplete picture of our economic system. Within a firm, the description does not fit at all. For instance, in economic theory we find that the allocation of factors of production between different uses is determined by the price mechanism. The price of factor A becomes higher in X than in Y. As a result, A moves from Y to X until the difference between the prices in X and Y, except in so far as it compensates for other differential advantages, disappears. Yet in the real world, we find that there are many areas where this does not apply. If a workman moves from department Y to department X, he does not go because of a change in relative prices, but because he is ordered to do so. Those who object to economic planning on the grounds that the problem is solved by price movements can be answered by pointing out that there is planning within our economic system which is quite different from the individual planning mentioned above and which is akin to what is normally called economic planning. The example given above is typical of a large sphere in our modern economic system. Of course, this fact has not been ignored by economists. Marshall introduces organisation as a fourth factor of production; J. B. Clark gives the co-ordinating function to the entrepreneur; Professor Knight introduces managers who co-ordinate. As D. H. Robertson points out, we find “islands of conscious power in this ocean of unconscious co-operation like lumps of butter coagulating in a pail of buttermilk.”11 Op. cit., p. 85. But in view of the fact that it is usually argued that co-ordination will be done by the price mechanism, why is such organisation necessary? Why are there these “islands of conscious power”? Outside the firm, price movements direct production, which is co-ordinated through a series of exchange transactions on the market. Within a firm, these market transactions are eliminated and in place of the complicated market structure with exchange transactions is substituted the entrepreneur-co-ordinator, who directs production.22 In the rest of this paper I shall use the term entrepreneur to refer to the person or persons who, in a competitive system, take the place of the price mechanism in the direction of resources. It is clear that these are alternative methods of co-ordinating production. Yet, having regard to the fact that if production is regulated by price movements, production could be carried on without any organisation at all, well might we ask, why is there any organisation? Of course, the degree to which the price mechanism is superseded varies greatly. In a department store, the allocation of the different sections to the various locations in the building may be done by the controlling authority or it may be the result of competitive price bidding for space. In the Lancashire cotton industry, a weaver can rent power and shop-room and can obtain looms and yarn on credit.33 Survey of Textile Industries, p. 26. This co-ordination of the various factors of production is, however, normally carried out without the intervention of the price mechanism. As is evident, the amount of “vertical” integration, involving as it does the supersession of the price mechanism, varies greatly from industry to industry and from firm to firm. It can, I think, be assumed that the distinguishing mark of the firm is the supersession of the price mechanism. It is, of course, as Professor Robbins points out, “related to an outside network of relative prices and costs,”11 Op. cit., p. 71. but it is important to discover the exact nature of this relationship. This distinction between the allocation of resources in a firm and the allocation in the economic system has been very vividly described by Mr. Maurice Dobb when discussing Adam Smith's conception of the capitalist: “It began to be seen that there was something more important than the relations inside each factory or unit captained by an undertaker; there were the relations of the undertaker with the rest of the economic world outside his immediate sphere…. the undertaker busies himself with the division of labour inside each firm and he plans and organises consciously,” but “he is related to the much larger economic specialisation, of which he himself is merely one specialised unit. Here, he plays his part as a single cell in a larger organism, mainly unconscious of the wider rôle he fills.”22 Capitalist Enterprise and Social Progress, p. 20. Cf., also, Henderson, Supply and Demand, pp. 3–5. In view of the fact that while economists treat the price mechanism as a co-ordinating instrument, they also admit the co-ordinating function of the “entrepreneur,” it is surely important to enquire why co-ordination is the work of the price mechanism in one case and of the entrepreneur in another. The purpose of this paper is to bridge what appears to be a gap in economic theory between the assumption (made for some purposes) that resources are allocated by means of the price mechanism and the assumption (made for other purposes) that this allocation is dependent on the entrepreneur-co-ordinator. We have to explain the basis on which, in practice, this choice between alternatives is effected.33 It is easy to see when the State takes over the direction of an industry that, in planning it, it is doing something which was previously done by the price mechanism. What is usually not realised is that any business man in organising the relations between his departments is also doing something which could be organised through the price mechanism. There is therefore point in Mr. Durbin's answer to those who emphasise the problems involved in economic planning that the same problems have to be solved by business men in the competitive system. (See “Economic Calculus in a Planned Economy,”Economic Journal, December, 1936.) The important difference between these two cases is that economic planning is imposed on industry while firms arise voluntarily because they represent a more efficient method of organising production. In a competitive system, there is an “optimum” amount of planning! Our task is to attempt to discover why a firm emerges at all in a specialised exchange economy. The price mechanism (considered purely from the side of the direction of resources) might be superseded if the relationship which replaced it was desired for its own sake. This would be the case, for example, if some people preferred to work under the direction of some other person. Such individuals would accept less in order to work under someone, and firms would arise naturally from this. But it would appear that this cannot be a very important reason, for it would rather seem that the opposite tendency is operating if one judges from the stress normally laid on the advantage of “being one's own master.”11 Cf. Harry Dawes, “Labour Mobility in the Steel Industry,”Economic Journal, March, 1934, who instances “the trek to retail shopkeeping and insurance work by the better paid of skilled men due to the desire (often the main aim in life of a worker) to be independent” (p. 86). Of course, if the desire was not to be controlled but to control, to exercise power over others, then people might be willing to give up something in order to direct others; that is, they would be willing to pay others more than they could get under the price mechanism in order to be able to direct them. But this implies that those who direct pay in order to be able to do this and are not paid to direct, which is clearly not true in the majority of cases.22 None the less, this is not altogether fanciful. Some small shopkeepers are said to earn less than their assistants. Firms might also exist if purchasers preferred commodities which are produced by firms to those not so produced; but even in spheres where one would expect such preferences (if they exist) to be of negligible importance, firms are to be found in the real world.33 G. F. Shove, “The Imperfection of the Market: a Further Note,”Economic Journal, March, 1933, p. 116, note 1, points out that such preferences may exist, although the example he gives is almost the reverse of the instance given in the text. Therefore there must be other elements involved. The main reason why it is profitable to establish a firm would seem to be that there is a cost of using the price mechanism. The most obvious cost of “organising” production through the price mechanism is that of discovering what the relevant prices are.44 According to N. Kaldor, “A Classificatory Note of the Determinateness of Equilibrium,”Review of Economic Studies, February, 1934, it is one of the assumptions of static theory that “All the relevant prices are known to all individuals.” But this is clearly not true of the real world. This cost may be reduced but it will not be eliminated by the emergence of specialists who will sell this information. The costs of negotiating and concluding a separate contract for each exchange transaction which takes place on a market must also be taken into account.11 This influence was noted by Professor Usher when discussing the development of capitalism. He says: “The successive buying and selling of partly finished products were sheer waste of energy.” (Introduction to the Industrial History of England, p. 13). But he does not develop the idea nor consider why it is that buying and selling operations still exist. Again, in certain markets, e.g., produce exchanges, a technique is devised for minimising these contract costs; but they are not eliminated. It is true that contracts are not eliminated when there is a firm but they are greatly reduced. A factor of production (or the owner thereof) does not have to make a series of contracts with the factors with whom he is co-operating within the firm, as would be necessary, of course, if this co-operation were as a direct result of the working of the price mechanism. For this series of contracts is substituted one. At this stage, it is important to note the character of the contract into which a factor enters that is employed within a firm. The contract is one whereby the factor, for a certain remuneration (which may be fixed or fluctuating), agrees to obey the directions of an entrepreneur within certain limits.22 It would be possible for no limits to the powers of the entrepreneur to be fixed. This would be voluntary slavery. According to Professor Batt, The Law of Master and Servant, p. 18, such a contract would be void and unenforceable. The essence of the contract is that it should only state the limits to the powers of the entrepreneur. Within these limits, he can therefore direct the other factors of production. There are, however, other disadvantages—or costs—of using the price mechanism. It may be desired to make a long-term contract for the supply of some article or service. This may be due to the fact that if one contract is made for a longer period, instead of several shorter ones, then certain costs of making each contract will be avoided. Or, owing to the risk attitude of the people concerned, they may prefer to make a long rather than a short-term contract. Now, owing to the difficulty of forecasting, the longer the period of the contract is for the supply of the commodity or service, the less possible, and indeed, the less desirable it is for the person purchasing to specify what the other contracting party is expected to do. It may well be a matter of indifference to the person supplying the service or commodity which of several courses of action is taken, but not to the purchaser of that service or commodity. But the purchaser will not know which of these several courses he will want the supplier to take. Therefore, the service which is being provided is expressed in general terms, the exact details being left until a later date. All that is stated in the contract is the limits to what the persons supplying the commodity or service is expected to do. The details of what the supplier is expected to do is not stated in the contract but is decided later by the purchaser. When the direction of resources (within the limits of the contract) becomes dependent on the buyer in this way, that relationship which I term a “firm” may be obtained.11 Of course, it is not possible to draw a hard and fast line which determines whether there is a firm or not. There may be more or less direction. It is similar to the legal question of whether there is the relationship of master and servant or principal and agent. See the discussion of this problem below. A firm is likely therefore to emerge in those cases where a very short term contract would be unsatisfactory. It is obviously of more importance in the case of services—labour—than it is in the case of the buying of commodities. In the case of commodities, the main items can be stated in advance and the details which will be decided later will be of minor significance. We may sum up this section of the argument by saying that the operation of a market costs something and by  an organisation and  some authority   to direct the  certain  costs are  The entrepreneur has to  out his function at less   into  the fact that he may get factors of production at a  price than the market transactions which he  because it is  possible to  to the  market if he  to do this. The question of  is one which is often considered to be very relevant to the  of the  of the firm. It   that a firm would emerge without the  of  But  for instance, Professor  who make the  of  the distinguishing mark of the   being  to some of those  in production by a person who takes the  and   appear to be  a point which is  to the problem we are   entrepreneur may sell his  to  for a certain sum of  while the  to his  may be mainly or  a  in  The  of Professor Knight are   in more  The  question would appear to be why the allocation of resources is not done directly by the price mechanism.  factor that should be noted is that exchange transactions on a market and the same transactions organised within a firm are often treated  by  or other  with   If we consider the operation of a   it is clear that it is a  on market transactions and not on the same transactions organised within the firm.   these are alternative methods of  the price mechanism or by the  a  would  into  firms which  would have no   It would  a reason for the emergence of a firm in a specialised exchange economy. Of course, to the  that firms already exist, such a  as a   would merely  to make  larger than they would      and methods of price  which  that there is  and which do not  to firms  such products for  by   to those who  within the firm and not through the  necessarily  the  of  But it is  to  that it is  such as have been mentioned in this  which have  firms into  Such   however,  to have this result if they  not exist for other    are the  why  such as firms exist in a specialised exchange  in which it is  assumed that the  of resources is  by the price mechanism. A firm,   of the system of  which  into  when the direction of resources is dependent on an entrepreneur. The  which has  been  would appear to  an advantage in that it is possible to give a   to what is meant by saying that a firm  larger or  A firm becomes larger as  transactions (which could be exchange transactions co-ordinated through the price  are organised by the entrepreneur and becomes  as he  the organisation of such  The question which  is whether it is possible to  the  which  the  of the firm. Why does the entrepreneur not  one less transaction or one  It is  to note that Professor Knight   “the  between  and  is one of the most  problems of   in  with the  for a   a matter of  and   rather than of  general  But the question is   because the  of    a powerful  to  and   of the firm, which  must be  by some  powerful one making for    the production of   with  in  if even   is to    and   to the    of Economics  of    1933. Professor Knight would appear to consider that it is  to treat  the  of the  of the firm.  the basis of the  of the firm developed  this task will  be  It was suggested that the  of the firm was due  to the  of   A  question to  would appear to be   from the    by Professor   if by organising one can  certain costs and in fact  the cost of production, are there any market transactions at  There are certain  costs which could only be eliminated by the  of   and these are the costs of  It is  that these costs might be so  that people would be willing to accept  because the   obtained was  the  of their  Why is not all production carried on by one   There would appear to be certain possible   as a firm   there may be   to the entrepreneur  that is, the costs of organising  transactions within the firm may  This argument assumes that exchange transactions on a market can be considered as  which is clearly  in  This  is taken into  below.  a point must be  where the costs of organising an  transaction within the firm are  to the costs involved in  out the transaction in the    to the costs of organising by  entrepreneur.  it may be that as the transactions which are organised  the entrepreneur  to place the factors of production in the uses where their  is  that is,  to make the  use of the factors of production. Again, a point must be  where the  through the waste of resources is  to the  costs of the exchange transaction in the  market or to the  if the transaction was organised by  entrepreneur.  the supply price of one or more of the factors of production may  because the   of a small firm are  than those of a large  For a discussion of the  of the supply price of factors of production to firms of   see  A. G. Robinson, The  of   It is  said that the supply price of organising   as the  of the firm  because men prefer to be the  of small   rather than the  of departments in a large  See  The   p.  and  Industrial  p. 63. This is a  argument of those who   It is said that larger  would be more  but owing to the   of the   they prefer to   apparently in  of the higher  which their   under    Of course, the  point where the  of the firm  might be determined by a  of the factors mentioned  The first two  given most  correspond to the   of   to  This discussion is, of course,  and  For a more  discussion of this   see N. Kaldor, “The Equilibrium of the Firm,”Economic Journal, March, 1934, and  A. G. Robinson, “The  of  and the  of the Firm,”Economic Journal,  1934. The point has been made in the   that a firm will  to  until the costs of organising an  transaction within the firm   to the costs of  out the same transaction by means of an exchange on the  market or the costs of organising in  firm. But if the firm  its  at a point  the costs of  in the  market and at a point  to the costs of organising in  firm, in most cases  the case of  this will  that there is a market transaction between these two  each of whom could  it at less than the     is the  to be  If we consider an example the reason for this will  clear.  A is buying a  from  and that both A and  could  this  transaction at less than its    we can  is not organising one process or  of production, but  If A therefore  to  a market  he will have to take over all the  of production controlled by B.  A takes over all the  of production, a market transaction will still  although it is a different  that is  But we have previously assumed that as each   he becomes less  the  costs of organising  transactions  It is  that  cost of organising the transactions previously organised by  will be  than  cost of doing the same  A therefore will take over the whole of  organisation only if his cost of organising  work is not  than  cost by an amount  to the costs of  out an exchange transaction on the  market. But  it becomes  to have a market  it also  to  production in such a  that the cost of organising an  transaction in each firm is the   to  it has been assumed that the exchange transactions which take place through the price mechanism are  In   could be more  than the  transactions which take place in our modern world. This would seem to  that the costs of  out exchange transactions through the price mechanism will   as will also the costs of organising these transactions within the firm. It  therefore possible that quite  from the question of   the costs of organising certain transactions within the firm may be  than the costs of  out the exchange transactions in the  market. This would necessarily  that there were exchange transactions carried out through the price mechanism, but would it mean that there would have to be more than one    for all those areas in the economic system where the direction of resources was not dependent directly on the price mechanism could be organised within one firm. The factors which were   would seem to be the important ones,  it is  to  whether   to  or the  supply price of factors is likely to be the more    being   a firm will  to be  the less the costs of organising and the  these costs  with an  in the transactions  the less likely the entrepreneur is to make  and the  the  in  with an  in the transactions  the  the  (or the less the  in the supply price of factors of production to firms of larger   from  in the supply price of factors of production to firms of different  it would appear that the costs of organising and the  through  will  with an  in the   of the transactions  in the","journal":"Economica","year":1937,"id":10300,"datarank":29.476857215112414,"base_score":10.055478759522249,"endowment":10.055478759522249,"self_citation_contribution":1.5083218139283374,"citation_network_contribution":27.968535401184077,"self_endowment_contribution":1.5083218139283374,"citer_contribution":27.968535401184077,"corpus_percentile":99.2,"corpus_rank":449,"citation_count":23282,"citer_count":199,"citers_with_citation_signal":199,"citers_with_endowment":199,"datacite_reuse_total":0,"is_dataset":false,"is_oa":true,"file_count":0,"downloads":0,"has_version_chain":false,"published_date":"1937-11-01","authors":[{"id":86466,"name":"Ronald H. 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