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Law and Economics

Syracuse University

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Full-Text Articles in Law

The Limits Of Wto Adjudication: Is Compliance The Problem?, Juscelino F. Colares Jul 2012

The Limits Of Wto Adjudication: Is Compliance The Problem?, Juscelino F. Colares

College of Law - Faculty Scholarship

Mainstream international trade law scholars have commented positively on the work of WTO adjudicators. This favorable view is both echoed and challenged by empirical scholarship that shows a high disparity between Complainant and Respondent success rates (Complainants win between 80 and 90 percent of the disputes). Regardless of how one interprets these results, mainstream theorists, especially legalists, believe more is to be done to strengthen the system, and they point to instances of member recalcitrance to implement rulings as a serious problem. This article posits that such attempts to strengthen compliance are ill-advised. After discussing prior empirical analyses of WTO …


Contract Law's Inefficiency, David M. Driesen Jul 2012

Contract Law's Inefficiency, David M. Driesen

College of Law - Faculty Scholarship

Neoclassical economic theory seems to aptly characterize contract law’s essence. Contracts enable two parties to reach a mutually beneficial agreement, thereby facilitating economically efficient transactions. It would seem to follow that the achievement of economic efficiency serves as contract law’s major goal. This article, however, examines an alternative hypothesis, that contract law is about enforcing inefficient bargains in order to provide enough security to facilitate cooperation among economic actors over long periods of time. On this account, contract law manages change over time, rather than achieves static efficiency. While recognizing that parties execute contracts in order to realize an efficient …


"Systemic Poverty As A Cause Of Recessions", Robert Ashford Jul 2012

"Systemic Poverty As A Cause Of Recessions", Robert Ashford

College of Law - Faculty Scholarship

This article argues that the failure to address and ameliorate systemic poverty is a major cause of recessions. Recessions occur (and sub-optimal employment and growth persist) when a critical mass of market participants come to believe that the distribution of future earning capacity is not sufficient to purchase what can be produced despite the physical and technological capacity to employ available labor and capital to produce more over the same period even at lower unit cost. The essence of systemic poverty is widespread inadequate earning capacity. In recessionary periods, with rising unemployment, the problem of inadequate earning capacity (which perennially …