The Archives

The collection of all scholarly commentary on law, economics, and more

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Into Eternity

One of the ways I celebrated my birthday yesterday in Chicago was seeing a movie in the afternoon(!) at the Siskel Center.  The film is Into Eternity.   Here’s the setup:  Finland has nuclear waste which can be dangerous to humans for 100,000 years.  So they’ve decided to bury in a way that it will ... Into Eternity

Sacrificing Consumer Welfare in the Search Bias Debate

Eric Clemons and Nehal Madhani have a posted a series of short blog posts on the Huffington Post focusing on Google, antitrust, and more specifically, vertical integration and search (Part I, Part II, and Part III).   The articles contain much of the standard hand-wringing about vertical integration and its impact on consumer welfare.  This is ... Sacrificing Consumer Welfare in the Search Bias Debate

The myth of government protection of financial markets

With all the calls for more government supervision of financial markets it’s healthy to keep in mind what the public actually gets from this costly supervision. In many previous posts (e.g., here, here and here) I summarized the SEC’s egregious incompetence in missing the Madoff fraud. When private firms mess up they get sued and punished ... The myth of government protection of financial markets

Nashville Limo Regulation

Just got an email from Mark Meranta (who I do not know) from the Institute of Justice (which I do know and which does great work) on a new case they are filing in Nashville regarding anti-competitive regulation of the limousine industry (video here. )  The law apparently mandates a minimum price for limo service ... Nashville Limo Regulation

“We therefore commit, effective immediately, to give every author at least seven days to decide whether to accept any offer for publication”

There is lots of talk about the various implications of the agreement between the various law reviews to cease and desist with the practice of exploding offers.   One interesting aspect of the commitment is that it is fairly transparent that the law reviews viewed exploding offers as a method of competing with one another, and ... “We therefore commit, effective immediately, to give every author at least seven days to decide whether to accept any offer for publication”

China land and bachelors

The New York Times has an interesting story about land markets in China.  In order to get married a man needs to own property and land prices are very high in China.  As it its habit, the Times blames “overeager developers who force residents out of old neighborhoods.” In fact, the Times gets it backwards.  ... China land and bachelors

Stand Up Economist

For our department seminar last week the speaker was Yoram Bauman, the Stand Up Economist.  Yoram is  a serious economist with a Ph.D. from the University of Washington.  He has been organizing a humor session at the AEA meetings (where my colleague Hugo Mialon presented his well known paper on Faking). What I want to ... Stand Up Economist

Declaring Victory or Premature Celebration?

Russell Korobkin (UCLA) provocatively declares the ultimate victory of behavioral law and economics over neoclassical economics: I am declaring victory in the battle for the methodological soul of the law and economics discipline. There is no need to continue to pursue the debate between behavioralists (that is, proponents of incorporating insights previously limited to the ... Declaring Victory or Premature Celebration?

Morgenson tries to rally a posse

Tom Kirkendall rightly criticizes a Gretchen Morgenson “newsitorial” in the NYT on the absence of criminal prosecutions from the financial meltdown. Even pairing Morgenson with a real reporter can’t hide the true nature of this diatribe, which picks up where Inside Job’s Charles Ferguson left off on Oscar night.  Morgenson’s screed even trots out quotes ... Morgenson tries to rally a posse

Interior designers and lawyers

The WSJ and I have been discussing the myriad idiotic licensing laws that help strangle entrepreneurship in the US.  Last up was cat groomers. Today it’s interior designers: Florida is one of only three states that require commercial interior designers to become licensed before they hang a single painting in an office building, school or ... Interior designers and lawyers

Unconscious Parallelism or Collusion? Libor Edition

News comes that the DOJ and SEC are “examining whether some of the world’s biggest banks colluded to manipulate a key interest rate before and during the financial crisis, affecting trillions of dollars in loans and derivatives, say people familiar with the situation.”  The Wall Street Journal Reports that: The inquiry, led by the U.S. ... Unconscious Parallelism or Collusion? Libor Edition

Congress jerks the SEC’s leash

Last week I argued that the SEC’s considering relaxing the rule requiring 1934 act registration of stock classes with more than 499 shareholders was not what it seemed.  I noted that while this might look like a move toward liberalization by permitting more Facebook-style markets, it actually furthered a trend toward closing US securities markets ... Congress jerks the SEC’s leash