Publication | Closed Access
Markets, Bureaucracies, and Clans
4.7K
Citations
24
References
1980
Year
Organizational EconomicsOrganization ScienceInstitutional EconomicsIndustrial OrganizationOrganizational BehaviorSocial SciencesBureaucracyEfficiency CriterionOrganizational EfficiencyManagementPolitical EconomyMarket InstitutionEconomicsAccountingStrategic ManagementInterorganizational RelationshipPerformance AmbiguityOrganizational SystemOrganizational StructureOrganization TheoryBusinessBusiness StrategyPolitical Science
Evaluating organizations according to an efficiency criterion would make it possible to predict the form organizations will take under certain conditions. Organization theory has not developed such a criterion because it has lacked a conceptual scheme capable of describing organizational efficiency in sufficiently microsopic terms. The transactions cost approach provides such a framework because it allows us to identify the conditions which give rise to the costs of mediating exchanges between individuals: goal incongruence and performance ambiguity. Different combinations of these causes distinguish three basic mechanisms of mediation or control: markets, which are efficient when performance ambiguity is low and goal incongruence is high; bureaucracies, which are efficient when both goal incongruence and performance ambiguity are moderately high; and clans, which are efficient when goal incongruence is low and performance ambiguity is high.
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