The Value Principle in Management Practices
2025·
,·
0 min read
Patrick Legros
Andrew F Newman
Abstract
The value principle in organizational economics states that the net market value of the goods that a firm sells is a key determinant of its organizational design. We survey and extend some recent developments in the theoretical literature at the nexus of organizational and industrial economics, focusing on this precept as the unifying theme. Under perfect competition, we study how market price influences the use of scarce professional management and the degree of organizational heterogeneity in an industry. In a more general setting, we show how changes in demand influence not only the use of professional management, but also the size and the market power of firms. And we show how prices can affect the internal control structure of firms, sometimes in highly distorted ways. We discuss applications to comparative industrial organization and to technological diffusion.
Type
Publication
Games, 16(5), 50

Authors
Professor of Economics (Emeritus)
Patrick Legros is Professor of Economics at the Université Libre de Bruxelles, and is affiliated with the research center ECARES within the Solvay Brussels School of Economics and Management.