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The Institutions of Livelihood and Social Enterprise Systems
- Source :
- Forum for Social Economics. :1-16
- Publication Year :
- 2021
- Publisher :
- Informa UK Limited, 2021.
-
Abstract
- This paper considers resource coordination in production systems featuring the presence of enterprises and organizations pursuing social, health-related, educational, cultural, and environmental aims, or social enterprises (SEs). The resource coordination problem is one of allocating and distributing resources towards these aims. By their very nature, these goals are very close to the Polanyian idea of the primacy of society over the self-regulating market. We ask what the specificities of organisations that pursue social aims are, and what coordination mechanisms underpin their production. The premise is that individuals are driven by plural motivations, including pro-social motivations besides self-interested ones, thus requiring a plurality of coordination mechanisms. The paper suggests that SEs make principal use of cooperative pacts based on norms of reciprocity, but include also market and state-led coordination, both at organisational and systemic levels. We consider specific institutional solutions in support of cooperation and reciprocity. These are: combined rules on profit and asset distribution, surplus accumulation and redistribution, and multi-stakeholding.
- Subjects :
- Economics and Econometrics
Profit (accounting)
Sociology and Political Science
business.industry
050204 development studies
media_common.quotation_subject
05 social sciences
Distribution (economics)
Norm of reciprocity
Redistribution (cultural anthropology)
Resource coordination
Deliberation
Livelihood
Reciprocity (social psychology)
Premise
0502 economics and business
Production (economics)
Asset (economics)
Business
050207 economics
Economic system
Industrial organization
media_common
Social enterprise
Subjects
Details
- ISSN :
- 18746381 and 07360932
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- Forum for Social Economics
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....f981684bc96795dc446336915ddd9938