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  • Managing Information in the Roman Economy
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      • Publisher's listprice EUR 160.49
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    66 563 Ft

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    Product details:

    • Edition number 1st ed. 2021
    • Publisher Springer International Publishing
    • Date of Publication 24 December 2020
    • Number of Volumes 1 pieces, Book

    • ISBN 9783030540999
    • Binding Hardback
    • No. of pages339 pages
    • Size 210x148 mm
    • Weight 591 g
    • Language English
    • Illustrations XIII, 339 p. 6 illus. Illustrations, black & white
    • 123

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    Long description:

    This volume studies information as an economic resource in the Roman World. Information asymmetry is a distinguishing phenomenon of any human relationship. From an economic perspective, private or hidden information, opposed to publicly observable information, generates advantages and inequalities; at the same time, it is a source of profit, legal and illegal, and of transaction costs. The contributions that make up the present book aim to deepen our understanding of the economy of Ancient Rome by identifying and analysing formal and informal systems of knowledge and institutions that contributed to control, manage, restrict and enhance information. The chapters scrutinize the impact of information asymmetries on specific economic sectors, such as the labour market and the market of real estate, as well as the world of professional associations and trading networks. It further discusses structures and institutions that facilitated and regulated economic information in the public andthe private spheres, such as market places, auctions, financial mechanisms and instruments, state treasures and archives.

    Managing Asymmetric Information in the Roman Economy invites the reader to evaluate economic activities within a larger collective mental, social, and political framework, and aims ultimately to test the applicability of tools and ideas from theoretical frameworks such as the Economics of Information to ancient and comparative historical research.


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    Table of Contents:

    1. Asymmetric Information and the Roman Economy: Introduction.- 2. Economics and Information: Asymmetries, Uncertainties and Risks.- Part 1: Information Management.- 3. Managing Economic Public Information in Rome: the Aerarium as Central Archive of the Roman Republic.- 4. Managing Uncertainty and Asymmetric Information in Roman Auctions.- Part 2: The Real Estate and Land Property Market.- 5. Asymmetric Information, ager publicus and the Roman Land Market in the Second Century BC.- 6. Domum pestilentem vendo: Real Estate Market and Information Asymmetry in the Roman World.- 7. Marriage and Asymmetric Information on the Real Estate Market in Roman Egypt.- Part 3: The Labour Market.- 8. Information Asymmetry and the Roman Labour Market.- 9. Asymmetric information and adverse selection in the Roman slave market: the limits of legal remedy.- Part 4: Trade and Financial Markets.- 10. Information Landscapes and Economic Practice in the Roman World.- 11. Roman Professional collegia andEconomic Control. A Monopoly of Information?.- 12. A case of Arbitrage in a Worldwide Trade: Roman Coins in India.- 13. Information Governance in Roman Finance.- 14.Conclusions.

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