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The Rise Of "Fringetech": Regulatory Risks In Earned-Wage Access, Nakita Q. Cuttino
The Rise Of "Fringetech": Regulatory Risks In Earned-Wage Access, Nakita Q. Cuttino
Northwestern University Law Review
By many accounts, the financial technology, or FinTech, sector appears to have developed an innovative solution to assist low-income workers with income shortfalls between standard paydays by displacing fringe financial service providers, namely payday lenders. Earned wage access programs facilitate early transfers of earned-but-unpaid wages to low- income workers through mobile platforms, algorithmic technology, and GPS tracking. To many, earned wage access programs represent a win-win for employees and employers. These programs are believed to be cheaper and safer alternatives to payday loans. Preliminary research also suggests these programs improve labor-retention rates for employers and help reduce financial distress for …
Latin American Debt Obligations In The 1990s: Risk Strategies: Remedies And Judicial Enforcement, Lee C. Buchheit, Emilio Cardenas, Antonio Mendes, Thomas Heather
Latin American Debt Obligations In The 1990s: Risk Strategies: Remedies And Judicial Enforcement, Lee C. Buchheit, Emilio Cardenas, Antonio Mendes, Thomas Heather
Northwestern Journal of International Law & Business
This is a discussion of debt obligations in Latin America and how the symposium panelists would have advised there clients.
Preface: Latin American Debt In The 1990s: A New Scenario For Creditors And Debtors, Lee C. Buchheit, Ralph Reisner
Preface: Latin American Debt In The 1990s: A New Scenario For Creditors And Debtors, Lee C. Buchheit, Ralph Reisner
Northwestern Journal of International Law & Business
This short preface introduces the purpose of the symposium and introduces each of the articles tat will follow.
Cross-Border Lending: What's Different This Time, Lee C. Buchheit
Cross-Border Lending: What's Different This Time, Lee C. Buchheit
Northwestern Journal of International Law & Business
This article is based upon the author's lecture entitled "The Next Wave of Cross-Border Lending" delivered in connection with the Meredith Lectures at McGill University in April 1994.* The subject of that lecture, and of this article, is how cross-border lending to less developed countries (LDCs) in the 1990s differs from the last major period of such lending in the late 1970s. It is surely a testament to the accelerated obsolescence of modem financial commentary that the author's April 1994 lecture - delivered in the middle of a boom in cross-border lending - has already been followed by a bust …