The 'Invisible Hand' of Piracy: An Economic Analysis of the Information-Goods Supply Chain

Author(s):  
Antino Kim ◽  
Atanu Lahiri ◽  
Debabrata Dey
2020 ◽  
Vol 59 (1) ◽  
pp. 121-127
Author(s):  
Omer Siddique

One of the most important functions of law is to assign rights and liabilities in such a way that disputes do not arise. The failure to prevent disputes in a society indicates that the structure of the law is inefficient. Since the focus of law and economics is on efficiency (see Box 1) and how people respond to incentives, one way to carry out the economic analysis of the law is to use the framework of market capitalism. Driven by the idea of the invisible hand, the fundamental point of capitalism is that individuals should be able to use their capital freely, without the state’s interference. It implies that individuals’ legal ability to move capital should be frictionless.


Author(s):  
Edna Ullmann-Margalit
Keyword(s):  

The idea of the invisible hand has had an impact not only on the eighteenth and the nineteenth centuries but on the twentieth and twenty-first centuries as well, and it has had a curious ideological career: in previous centuries it had been used to promote ideals of secular, enlightened progress, while in the twentieth and the twenty-first, it is used inversely to promote conservative reverence toward traditions. There are two main models for invisible-hand explanations, and the current, inverse, ideological use of the idea of the invisible hand by conservative circles as against liberals and social planners springs from not distinguishing between the two models.


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