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Publication Date:
October 2001
ISSN:
1935-1682
DOI:
10.2202/1538-0637.1000

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Ed. by Auriol , Emmanuelle / Brunner, Johann / Fleck, Robert / Friebel, Guido / Ludwig, Sandra / Requate, Till / Schneider, Hilmar / Tsui, Kevin / Wichardt, Philipp

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VolumeIssuePage

Explaining Incomplete Contracts as the Result of Contract-Reading Costs

Eric Bennett Rasmusen1

1Indiana University/Harvard Law School, erasmuse@indiana.edu

Citation Information: Advances in Economic Analysis & Policy. Volume 1, Issue 1, Pages –, ISSN (Online) 1538-0637, DOI: 10.2202/1538-0637.1000, October 2001

Publication History:
Published Online:
2001-10-25

Abstract

Much real-world contracting involves finding new clauses to add to a basic agreement, clauses which may or may not increase the welfare of both parties. The parties must decide which complications to propose, how closely to examine the other side's proposals, and whether to accept them. This suggests a reason why contracts are incomplete in the sense of lacking Pareto-improving clauses: contract-reading costs matter as much as contract-writing costs. Fine print that is cheap to write can be expensive to read carefully enough to understand the value to the reader, and especially to verify the absence of clauses artfully written to benefit the writer at the reader's expense. As a result, complicated clauses may be rejected outright even if they really do benefit both parties, and this will deter proposing such clauses in the first place.

Keywords: negotiation; bargaining; incomplete contracts; standard-form contracts; trust

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