The paper presents a game-theoretic model in order to investigate to what extent an employee privatization program of a State owned firm can be feasible under certain assumptions concerning the players' objective functions and the market structure in which the firm operates. The public managers are assumed interested in the firm' s value, while the workers aim at maximizing the per capita surplus over the wage. The privatization process is then described as a bargaining process between the government in the role of core investor in the firm's physical assets and the workers of the firm, whose only asset is their personal skill. In the model the market structure in which the rm sells its product is assumed to be imperfectly competitive. After presenting the case of a monopolistic firm, the paper explores what happens if the firm plays a duopoly quantity game. The nal section is devoted to introducing to the analysis an x-efficiency cost proportional to the public share of the ownership.
Property Rights and Market: Employee Privatization as a Cooperative Bargaining Process / Marini, Marco. - In: ECONOMIC SYSTEMS. - ISSN 0939-3625. - STAMPA. - 20:(1996), pp. 273-305.
Property Rights and Market: Employee Privatization as a Cooperative Bargaining Process
MARINI, MARCO
1996
Abstract
The paper presents a game-theoretic model in order to investigate to what extent an employee privatization program of a State owned firm can be feasible under certain assumptions concerning the players' objective functions and the market structure in which the firm operates. The public managers are assumed interested in the firm' s value, while the workers aim at maximizing the per capita surplus over the wage. The privatization process is then described as a bargaining process between the government in the role of core investor in the firm's physical assets and the workers of the firm, whose only asset is their personal skill. In the model the market structure in which the rm sells its product is assumed to be imperfectly competitive. After presenting the case of a monopolistic firm, the paper explores what happens if the firm plays a duopoly quantity game. The nal section is devoted to introducing to the analysis an x-efficiency cost proportional to the public share of the ownership.I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.