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Articles 61 - 90 of 141
Full-Text Articles in Law
Roe V Nebbia: Could Roe Be In Constitutional Jeopardy?, R. Morris Coats, Victor Parker, Shane Sanders, Bhavneet Walia
Roe V Nebbia: Could Roe Be In Constitutional Jeopardy?, R. Morris Coats, Victor Parker, Shane Sanders, Bhavneet Walia
Shane D. Sanders
This study provides a positive analysis of abortion price regulation. Given Court precedent on the issues of abortion and state price regulation, the implementation of an abortion price control would create a potential legal conundrum. The price of abortion best meeting a state’s needs may affect incidence of legal abortion as would a direct market limitation or ban. Abortion price controls are evaluated with respect to relevant issues of liberty and confiscation. Given the Court's allowance of abortion as a marketable service allocated by a (restrictive) price mechanism, it is ambiguous and confounding that a state-controlled abortion price would present …
Tax First, Ask Questions Later: Problems Predicting The Effect Of Obama's International Tax Reforms, Timothy H. Shapiro
Tax First, Ask Questions Later: Problems Predicting The Effect Of Obama's International Tax Reforms, Timothy H. Shapiro
Timothy H Shapiro
The Obama Administration has proposed a dramatic reworking of the way US corporations are taxed on income they earn outside the US. Although less prominent than other Washington policy debates, these changes are no less contentious. The result is either a fairer tax system yielding the government an extra $210 billion, or the end of US-based multinational corporations, depending on who one asks. Yet both sides of the debate have opted for rhetorical simplicity over accuracy, sidestepping sixty years of theoretical scholarship on the subject. The world economy is a dynamic system, and the current projections of US companies’ reactions …
Against The Stand-Alone-Cost Test In U.S. Freight Rail Regulation, Russell W. Pittman
Against The Stand-Alone-Cost Test In U.S. Freight Rail Regulation, Russell W. Pittman
Russell W. Pittman
The stand-alone-cost test has become an expensive, extensive, and time-consuming part of the regulatory practice of the U.S. Surface Transportation Board in the performance of its statutory duty to protect "captive shippers" from monopoly rail rates. Worse, a close examination of the history of its adoption and application suggests only a very tenuous connection with its claimed intellectual foundations, the classic works of Faulhaber (1975) and Baumol, Panzar, and Willig (1982). It is time to retire this tool and replace it with something simpler and more effective and transparent.
The Future Of Music: Reconfiguring Public Performance Rights, Gary Myers, George Howard
The Future Of Music: Reconfiguring Public Performance Rights, Gary Myers, George Howard
Faculty Publications
This article focuses on two concrete measures to improve the music industry prognosis. Public performance rights have long been an important piece of the economic pie that helps support the music business. This article suggests that the scope of public performance rights should be fundamentally reassessed and expanded. This expansion involves two specific and complementary reconfigurations.
Understanding The New Tennessee Small Business Investment Company Credit Act: Stimulating Economic Growth At The Intersection Of Free Market Capitalism And Government Intervention, Brian Krumm
Scholarly Works
No abstract provided.
Microfinance Regulation: Interest Rate Caps And Concept Of Usury, Gray L. Skinner, William H. Payne
Microfinance Regulation: Interest Rate Caps And Concept Of Usury, Gray L. Skinner, William H. Payne
Gray L Skinner
I. Between Scylla and Charybdis: The balancing act of lending to the poor (Abstract)
Over the past two decades, microfinance has grown rapidly, reaching markets around the world and garnering the attention of policy makers and the media. Microfinance is the practice of offering small-scale banking services to communities in developing nations to improve the client's productivity and quality of life. The microfinance industry has attracted investors and practitioners who wish to unlock the profit potential of new markets while also achieving a philanthropic goal. As microfinance has grown, however, so has the need for legal regulation. Experts and practitioners …
How "Big" Became Bad: America's Underage Fling With Universal Banks, Lawrence G. Baxter
How "Big" Became Bad: America's Underage Fling With Universal Banks, Lawrence G. Baxter
Lawrence G. Baxter
In little more than a decade gigantic new financial institutions have emerged in America. These organizations are quite different from their predecessors in that they share the highly complex, diversified characteristics of foreign “universal banks.” They are still in the process of developing experienced and mature operational and risk management systems. During this same period, the regulatory framework necessary to match the size, power and hazards generated by these new universal banks remains underdeveloped, and the primary framework around which the system is being constructed, namely Basel II, lies in tatters in the wake of the financial crisis of 2007-08. …
Gender Budget Analysis In Morocco: Achieving Education Parity For Women And Girls, Christie J. Edwards
Gender Budget Analysis In Morocco: Achieving Education Parity For Women And Girls, Christie J. Edwards
Christie J. Edwards Esq.
The Kingdom of Morocco has a long history of stability and democracy in the North African region, in large part due to the government’s commitment to improving the lives and status of women and girls. In the past few years, Morocco has set ambitious goals for increased access for women and girls to education as key strategies for the country’s economic development. However, although the government has committed to these gender-specific policies, implementation of education and literacy programs has been sporadic and inconsistent due to the enormity of the problem of female illiteracy and the complexity of the solutions proposed …
Taking Bubbles Seriously In Contract Law, John P. Hunt
Taking Bubbles Seriously In Contract Law, John P. Hunt
John P Hunt
This Article argues that bubbles driven by traders with poor judgment exist, can be identified on an aggregate level, and have negative effects on parties that are not involved in the bubble markets. If those premises are accepted, then failing to respect bubble contracts – rescinding bubble transactions – makes sense. Such a rule should deter the formation of bubbles. Moreover, the rule is not in serious tension with the principle of freedom of contract to the degree one might expect. The poor judgment exhibited during a bubble suggests that incapacity should, and mistake and fraud do, apply to a …
The Financial Crisis And The Future Of Law And Economics, Wladimir D. Kraus
The Financial Crisis And The Future Of Law And Economics, Wladimir D. Kraus
Wladimir D. Kraus
A Failure of Capitalism is a multifaceted contribution to our understanding of the Great Recession. But, due to its overwhelmingly macroeconomic character and substance, the nuanced approach of the law and economics scholarship is virtually absent, and so is any plausible explanation of the financial crisis that touched off the great recession. This is puzzling, because attention to the economic consequences of the law seems to provide a much more powerful framework for understanding what caused the financial collapse, and it is a natural approach for scholars of law and economics to pursue.
The Broadcasters’ Transition Date Roulette: Strategic Aspects Of The Dtv Transition, James E. Prieger, James Miller
The Broadcasters’ Transition Date Roulette: Strategic Aspects Of The Dtv Transition, James E. Prieger, James Miller
James E. Prieger
The analog to digital “DTV transition” completed in June 2009 was a technological event unprecedented in scale in the broadcast television industry. The final analog cutoff for TV stations culminated more than ten years of complex regulatory decisions. Facing concerns that costs and revenue could change dramatically, stations chose when to transition in response to both market and regulatory forces. The history of broadcasting reveals a continual interplay between consumer demand, technological change, and regulation. This article describes the various forces that influenced the DTV transition, and empirically examines the stations’ decisions regarding when to switch. The economic and strategic …
A Consequential Approach To Interpretation And Interpretive Risk: Rethinking Judicial Intervention From Contracts To The Chrysler Bankruptcy, J. P. Kostritsky
A Consequential Approach To Interpretation And Interpretive Risk: Rethinking Judicial Intervention From Contracts To The Chrysler Bankruptcy, J. P. Kostritsky
Juliet P Kostritsky
Abstract When contracts remain ambiguous or incomplete, courts and scholars must confront the inevitable question of when intervention in private contracts is justified. To deal with the unresolution or residual uncertainty, the Austrian economists and the new textualists suggest that any intervention would be a fool’s errand. Their position amounts to an unvarying posture that any party asking for an additional term or a broad interpretation will always lose. Recognizing that there is an interpretive risk in all contracts, the court should adopt an interpretive methodology that parties would be willing to adopt and that would enhance the willingness of …
The Fox And The Ostrich: Is Gaap A Game Of Winks And Nods?, Arthur Acevedo
The Fox And The Ostrich: Is Gaap A Game Of Winks And Nods?, Arthur Acevedo
Arthur Acevedo
The fox is frequently described as sly, cunning and calculating in world literature. It is often associated with behavior that seeks advantage through trickery and pretext. The ostrich on the other hand, has been portrayed as cowardly and irrational. Its character defect is epitomized when it sticks its head in the sand at the first sign of trouble. The Financial Accounting Standards Board (FASB) can be described as the fox; the Securities Exchange Commission (SEC), the ostrich. This article examines the creation of accounting principles by the fox and the failure to govern by the ostrich. History demonstrates that the …
Just Notice: Re-Reforming Employment At Will, Rachel S. Arnow-Richman
Just Notice: Re-Reforming Employment At Will, Rachel S. Arnow-Richman
Rachel S. Arnow-Richman
This Article proposes a fundamental shift in the movement to reform employment termination law. For forty years, there has been a near consensus among employee advocates and worklaw scholars that the current doctrine of employment at will should be abandoned in favor of a rule requiring just cause for termination. This Article contends that such calls are misguided, not (as defenders of the current regime have argued) because a just cause rule grants workers too much protection vis-à-vis management, but because it grants them too little. A just cause rule provides only a weak cause of action to a narrow …
How Incentives Drove The Subprime Crisis, Charles W. Murdock
How Incentives Drove The Subprime Crisis, Charles W. Murdock
Charles W. Murdock
How Incentives Drove the Subprime Crisis
In order to address any systemic problem, whether the goal is to change the system, regulate the system, or change the incentives driving a system, it is necessary to appreciate all the drivers operating within the system. In the case of the subprime crisis, one of the drivers was the changing nature of the subprime loans, which was not factored into the models used by the investment bankers, the credit rating agencies, and the issuers of credit default swaps.
This paper is an attempt to look dispassionately at the subprime crisis from a particular …
Trust And The Reform Of Securities Regulation, Ronald J. Colombo
Trust And The Reform Of Securities Regulation, Ronald J. Colombo
Ronald J Colombo
Trust is a critically important ingredient in the recipes for a successful economy and a well-functioning securities market. Due to scandals, ranging in nature from massive incompetence, to massive irresponsibility, to massive fraud, investor trust is in shorter supply today than in years past. This is troubling, and commentators, policy makers, and industry leaders have all recognized the need for trust's restoration.
As in times of similar crises, many have turned to law and regulation for the answers to our problems. The imposition of additional regulatory oversight, safeguards, and remedies, some advocate, can help resuscitate investor trust. These advocates have …
Korea's Patent Policy And Its Impact On Economic Development: A Model For Emerging Countries?, Jay A. Erstling, Ryan E. Strom
Korea's Patent Policy And Its Impact On Economic Development: A Model For Emerging Countries?, Jay A. Erstling, Ryan E. Strom
San Diego International Law Journal
The purpose of this paper will be to examine Korean patent policy as exemplified by its patent legislation and the activities of KIPO. Part II will take a brief look at the rationale underpinning Korea’s confidence in the power of the patent system to stimulate economic growth. Part III of the paper will look at the Korean Patent Act as an example of strong, comprehensive patent legislation that fully complies with international standards and responds well to the perceived needs of patent applicants. Part III will examine one of the highlights of Korean patent legislation, the Korean Invention Promotion Act, …
Problematic Practices Of Credit Rating Agencies: The Neglected Risks Of Mortgage-Backed Securities, Franz Hosp
Problematic Practices Of Credit Rating Agencies: The Neglected Risks Of Mortgage-Backed Securities, Franz Hosp
Franz P Hosp V
This paper provides an overview of the role that credit rating agencies played in the Financial Crisis of 2008. In doing so, the paper focuses on how credit rating agencies failed to properly rate mortgage-backed securities, which played an instrumental role in bringing about the current economic problems. The paper also suggests reforming the credit rating agencies by implementing a handicapping system that infuses economic value in good credit ratings.
The Equity Trustee, Kelli A. Alces
The Equity Trustee, Kelli A. Alces
Kelli A. Alces
As we reel from the effects of a recent financial disaster, it is apparent that there is a significant gap in corporate governance and accountability for management. One reason why we have experienced this financial cataclysm is the inability of shareholders to do the “shareholder job.” Shareholders, as the putative owners of corporations, hold a venerated place in corporate governance. They are responsible for electing directors and monitoring management as well as valuing companies through trades in a vigorous market. The shareholder collective action problem and resulting rational apathy have kept shareholders from effectively fulfilling their role in corporate governance. …
Free To Air? – Legal Protection For Tv Program Formats, Neta-Li E. Gottlieb
Free To Air? – Legal Protection For Tv Program Formats, Neta-Li E. Gottlieb
Neta-li E Gottlieb
Television is only as strong as its programming. The use of program formats has slowly but surely developed into an important component of the television industry. This paper examines the surprising gap between the constantly growing, multi-billion-dollar trade of program formats and their unclear and contradictory legal treatment. Using an interdisciplinary approach, I look at the characteristics of both the product at hand and the markets it serves to examine possible justification for legal protection. I argue that the use of the term “TV format” is misleading and that a clear separation between the unpublished and published stages of the …
Free To Air? – Legal Protection For Tv Program Formats, Neta-Li E. Gottlieb
Free To Air? – Legal Protection For Tv Program Formats, Neta-Li E. Gottlieb
Neta-li E Gottlieb
Television is only as strong as its programming. The use of program formats has slowly but surely developed into an important component of the television industry. This paper examines the surprising gap between the constantly growing, multi-billion-dollar trade of program formats and their unclear and contradictory legal treatment. Using an interdisciplinary approach, I look at the characteristics of both the product at hand and the markets it serves to examine possible justification for legal protection. I argue that the use of the term “TV format” is misleading and that a clear separation between the unpublished and published stages of the …
Consumer Use And Government Regulation Of Title Pledge Lending, Todd J. Zywicki
Consumer Use And Government Regulation Of Title Pledge Lending, Todd J. Zywicki
Todd J. Zywicki
Recent years have seen growth in the use of certain types of nontraditional lending products, such as payday lending and auto title lending, and a relative decline of others, such as finance companies and pawnbrokers. Congress is currently considering major new regulations on short-term lending products, such as title lending, that could produce their demise—even though there is no evidence that such products were related in any way to the financial crisis.
This study examines the question of who uses title pledge lending and why. The results are surprising. I find that title pledge lending is used predominantly by three …
Fairness, Utility, And Market Risk, Jeff Schwartz
Fairness, Utility, And Market Risk, Jeff Schwartz
Jeff Schwartz
In this Article, I argue that we lack a satisfactory theory about how disclosure, the centerpiece of securities regulation, serves investor interests. To close this gap, I contend that the regulations should be viewed as part of a broader societal framework that protects individuals from stock-market risk. I flesh out this notion in three ways. First, I set out to justify protection from market risk as a valid societal goal. To do so, I appeal to Rawlsian and utilitarian notions of justice. These moral theories contain the principle that a just society helps individuals manage risk. I argue that this …
Underwater And Not Walking Away: Shame, Fear And The Social Management Of The Housing Crisis, Brent T. White
Underwater And Not Walking Away: Shame, Fear And The Social Management Of The Housing Crisis, Brent T. White
Brent T. White
Despite reports that homeowners are increasingly “walking away” from their mortgages, most homeowners continue to make their payments even when they are significantly underwater. This article suggests that most homeowners choose not to strategically default as a result of two emotional forces: 1) the desire to avoid the shame and guilt of foreclosure; and 2) exaggerated anxiety over foreclosure’s perceived consequences. Moreover, these emotional constraints are actively cultivated by the government and other social control agents in order to encourage homeowners to follow social and moral norms related to the honoring of financial obligations - and to ignore market and …
Baseball's Moral Hazard: Law, Economics And The Designated Hitter Rule, Steve P. Calandrillo
Baseball's Moral Hazard: Law, Economics And The Designated Hitter Rule, Steve P. Calandrillo
Steve P. Calandrillo
No subject prompts greater disagreement among baseball fans than the designated hitter rule, which allows teams to designate a player to hit for the pitcher. The rule increases the number of hit batsmen, and some have suggested this effect is a result of “moral hazard,” which recognizes that persons insured against risk are more likely to engage in dangerous behavior. Because American League pitchers do not bat, they allegedly are not deterred by the full cost of making risky, inside pitches—namely, retribution during their next at bat. Using a law-and-economics approach, this Article concludes that the designated hitter rule creates …
Baseball's Moral Hazard: Law, Economics And The Designated Hitter Rule, Steve P. Calandrillo
Baseball's Moral Hazard: Law, Economics And The Designated Hitter Rule, Steve P. Calandrillo
Steve P. Calandrillo
No subject prompts greater disagreement among baseball fans than the designated hitter rule, which allows teams to designate a player to hit for the pitcher. The rule increases the number of hit batsmen, and some have suggested this effect is a result of “moral hazard,” which recognizes that persons insured against risk are more likely to engage in dangerous behavior. Because American League pitchers do not bat, they allegedly are not deterred by the full cost of making risky, inside pitches—namely, retribution during their next at bat. Using a law-and-economics approach, this Article concludes that the designated hitter rule creates …
Affirmative Action: Where It Was, Where It Is, And Where It Should Go, Lawrence Opisso
Affirmative Action: Where It Was, Where It Is, And Where It Should Go, Lawrence Opisso
Lawrence Opisso
A comment on the history of affirmative action, its current state, and a perspective on its future. This comment focuses on affirmative action moving toward a poverty-based solution to social inequities.
February 11, 2010: Economic Life Under Hallowed Secularism, Bruce Ledewitz
February 11, 2010: Economic Life Under Hallowed Secularism, Bruce Ledewitz
Hallowed Secularism
Blog post, “Economic Life Under Hallowed Secularism“ discusses politics, theology and the law in relation to religion and public life in the democratic United States of America.
Coase, Institutionalism, And The Origins Of Law And Economics, Herbert Hovenkamp
Coase, Institutionalism, And The Origins Of Law And Economics, Herbert Hovenkamp
Herbert Hovenkamp
ABSTRACT
Ronald Coase merged two traditions in economics, marginalism and institutionalism. Neoclassical economics in the 1930s was characterized by an abstract conception of marginalism and frictionless resource movement. Marginal analysis did not seek to uncover the source of individual human preference, but accepted preference as given. It treated the business firm in the same way, focusing on how firms make market choices, but saying little about their internal workings.
“Institutionalism” historically refers to a group of economists who wrote mainly in the 1920s and 1930s. Their place in economic theory is outside the mainstream, but they have found new energy …
An Economic Take On Patent Licensing: Understanding The Implications Of The “First Sale Patent Exhaustion” Doctrine, Anne S. Layne-Farrar
An Economic Take On Patent Licensing: Understanding The Implications Of The “First Sale Patent Exhaustion” Doctrine, Anne S. Layne-Farrar
Anne S. Layne-Farrar
Under the legal doctrine of first sale, or patent exhaustion, a patent holder’s ability to license multiple parties along a production chain is restricted. How and when such restrictions should be applied is a controversial issue, as evidenced by the Supreme Court’s granting certiorari in the Quanta case. The issue is important, as it has significant implications for how firms can license in vertically disaggregated industries. We explore this issue from an economic viewpoint and find that under ideal circumstances how royalty rates are split along the production chain has no real consequence for social welfare. Even when we depart …