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Full-Text Articles in Law

The Shadow Payment System, Dan Awrey, Kristin Van Zwieten Jul 2018

The Shadow Payment System, Dan Awrey, Kristin Van Zwieten

Cornell Law Faculty Publications

Banking, derivatives, and structured finance may attract the lion's share of accolades and approbation in global finance-but payment systems are where the money is. Historically, payment systems in most jurisdictions have been legally and operationally intertwined with the conventional banking system. The stability of these payment systems has thus parasitically benefited from the unique prudential regulatory strategies imposed on deposit-taking banks. These strategies include emergency liquidity assistance or "lender of last resort" facilities, deposit guarantee schemes, and special bankruptcy or "resolution" regimes for failing banks. Importantly, these strategies have the practical effect of relaxing the strict application of corporate bankruptcy …


The Capital Commons: Digital Money And Citizens' Finance In A Productive Commercial Republic, Robert C. Hockett Jun 2018

The Capital Commons: Digital Money And Citizens' Finance In A Productive Commercial Republic, Robert C. Hockett

Cornell Law Faculty Working Papers

All societies must address two questions where the organization of productive activity is concerned. The first is whether production will be mainly publicly managed, privately managed, or 'mixed.' The second is whether the financing of production will be mainly publicly managed, privately managed, or mixed.

In the American commercial republic, we seem more or less to have answered the 'who does production' question to our own satisfaction. From the founding era to the present, we have elected to leave production primarily, though not of course solely, 'in private hands.' Where the financing of production is concerned, on the other hand, …


Merchant Authorized Consumer Cash Substitutes, Steven Stites, Norman I. Silber Jan 2018

Merchant Authorized Consumer Cash Substitutes, Steven Stites, Norman I. Silber

Hofstra Law Faculty Scholarship

Merchant Authorized Consumer Cash Substitutes (MACCS) have existed in one form or another for hundreds of years although without a generic name. At nineteenth century American railroad construction sites far from established towns, companies paid employees with “scrip.” Coca Cola, beginning in 1887 issued “coupons” which entitled bearers to a glass of soda. About the same time the Standard Oil Company—a customer—demanded “rebates” from railroads who shipped its oil. Descendants of these merchant-created substitutes are the MACCS of today-- phenomena including today’s “Penny-Saver Coupons,” “Groupons,” “Gift Cards,” “Disney Dollars,” “E-bates,” “Air Miles,” “Rewards Points,” and “cash-back offers.” There are countless …