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The Organization of Illegal Markets - An Economic Analysis (Paperback)
Loot Price: R410
Discovery Miles 4 100
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The Organization of Illegal Markets - An Economic Analysis (Paperback)
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Loot Price R410
Discovery Miles 4 100
Expected to ship within 10 - 15 working days
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It is widely believed that monopoly control, based on violence,
corruption or risk-spreading, is characteristic of markets for
illegal goods and services, such as marijuana and bookmaking. This
essay examines the effects on the organization of a market arising
from changing the status of a good or service from legal to
illegal. In general, it can be shown that illegal enterprises are
likely to be smaller than their legal counterparts. The most
important reasons for this are the lack of external credit markets,
itself a consequence of the non-existence of audited records, the
lack of court enforceable contracts, and the need to restrict
knowledge of participation in the enterprise. The inability to
advertise or to create goodwill for the enterprise itself, as
opposed to goodwill for its agents, is also significant. Corruption
is likely to affect the organization of the market only under
special circumstances, where there is a single agency which
monopolizes enforcement. Though that condition held for most
illegal markets thirty years ago enforcement now is fragmented and
overlapping, which inhibits an agency from granting a monopoly
franchise. The introduction of violence does not in general change
this result. The use of violence to acquire market power can occur
only where there is a ready focus for that violence. Most illegal
markets lack either time or space consistency that would permit
exclusion of competition. Some comments about the optimal use of
violence are offered. The final section offers some analysis of the
plausibility of using illegal market enforcement as an instrument
of organized crime control. There have been systematic changes in
the set of opportunities available to organized crime members;
illegal markets no longer are so central to the power and income of
organized crime. The shift from gambling to narcotics markets has
also weakened the link between organized crime and illegal markets.
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