Chapter 2 Flashcards
(36 cards)
Beijing Consensus,
A view that questions Washington Consensus’s belief in the superiority of private ownership over state ownership in economic policy making, which is often associated with the position held by the Chinese government.
Bounded rationality
The necessity of making rational decisions in the absence of complete information.
Civil law
A legal tradition that uses comprehensive statutes and codes as a primary means to form legal judgments.
Cognitive pillar
The internalized (or taken-forgranted) values and beliefs that guide individual and firm behavior.
Command economy
An economy that is characterized by government ownership and control of factors of production.
Common law
A legal tradition that is shaped by precedents and traditions from previous judicial decisions.
Copyright
Exclusive legal rights of authors and publishers to publish and disseminate their work.
Democracy
A political system in which citizens elect representatives to govern the country on their behalf.
Economic system
Rules of the game on how a country is governed economically.
Formal institution
Institution represented by laws, regulations, and rules.
Institution-based view
A leading perspective in global business that suggests that the success and failure of firms are enabled and constrained by institutions.
Institutional framework
Formal and informal institutions that govern individual and firm behavior
Institutional transition
Fundamental and comprehensive changes introduced to the formal and informal rules of the game that affect firms as players.
Institution
Formal and informal rules of the game.
Intellectual property (IP)
Intangible property that is the result of intellectual activity.
Intellectual property right (IPR)
Right associated with the ownership of intellectual property.
Legal system
The rules of the game on how a country’s laws are enacted and enforced.
Market economy
An economy that is characterized by the “invisible hand” of market forces.
Mixed economy
An economy that has elements of both a market economy and a command economy.
Moral hazard
Recklessness when people and organizations (including firms and governments) do not have to face the full consequences of their actions.
Normative pillar
The mechanism through which norms influence individual and firm behavior.
Norms
Values, beliefs, and actions of relevant players that influence the focal individuals and firms.
Opportunism
The act of seeking self-interest with guile.
Patent
Exclusive legal rights of inventors of new products or processes to derive income from such inventions.