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Law entrepreneurs
On Thursday I’ll be speaking at the Law & Entrepreneurship “Conference within a Conference” hosted by Law & Society at its annual meeting in Chicago. Here’s my panel, also including Rob Beard, Brian Broughman and Erik Gerding. My topic is “law entrepreneurs.” My presentation will continue my speculation, begun in Death of Big Law, on ... Law entrepreneurs
The federalization of corporate governance marches on
Last month I noted that the Senate was about to repeat its SOX mistake with another ill-fated foray into regulating corporate governance. I focused on provisions for mandatory majority voting, separation of the board chair and CEO jobs, risk committees, say-on-pay, and pay-performance disclosures. Now Annette Nazareth summarizes (HT Bainbridge) the provisions in the ... The federalization of corporate governance marches on
Who is Pressuring Antitrust? A Response to Wright
[Jonathan Baker (American University, currently on leave at the Federal Communications Commission where he is Chief Economist) has written the following response to Josh’s earlier post commenting on Baker’s forthcoming article: Preserving a Political Bargain: The Political Economy of the Non-Interventionist Challenge to Monopolization Enforcement. Eds.] Thanks to Josh for engaging with my article in ... Who is Pressuring Antitrust? A Response to Wright
Cassano wins the corporate crime lottery
Justice has decided not to go after Joe Cassano, the man who crashed the world. The WSJ attributes this decision to the “high bar [the government] needs to meet to make criminal charges stick in a courtroom.” How nice that the government has discovered this bar. That could have something to do with its getting its head ... Cassano wins the corporate crime lottery
Litigating Delaware governance law in an alien land
A recent Delaware case, Baker v. Impact Holding, Inc., raises several interesting questions on a topic I’ve discussed recently – where to litigate cases involving Delaware business entities. Francis Pileggi has a good summary of the case. I want to explore the case’s implications for jurisdictional competition. First some general background before getting into the ... Litigating Delaware governance law in an alien land
The Capitalist & The Entrepreneur: Essays on Organizations and Markets
I purchased my copy of Peter Klein’s latest — The Capitalist & The Entrepreneur: Essays on Organizations and Markets — today. It is available for purchase here and here. And if you wont to sneak a peak, you can see the full version here. The role of the entrepreneur is one of the more under-theorized ... The Capitalist & The Entrepreneur: Essays on Organizations and Markets
Giving away the first year of law school
Christine Hurt suggests: If Progressive Law School costs $30,000 a year today, then starting next year, the first year is free, and the second year is $45,000 and the third year is $45,000. Students are admitted the same way, only tuition is deferred until a student registers for the second year of law school. If ... Giving away the first year of law school
Comments on Jonathan Baker's Preserving a Political Bargain
I’ve recently finished reading Jonathan Baker’s Preserving a Political Bargain: The Political Economy of the Non-Interventionist Challenge to Monopolization Enforcement, forthcoming in the Antitrust Law Journal. Baker’s central thesis in Preserving a Political Bargain builds on earlier work concerning competition policy as an implicit political bargain that was reached during the 1940s between the more ... Comments on Jonathan Baker's Preserving a Political Bargain
Price Discrimination in Education
Tom Smith offers an entertaining and insightful perspective on the economics of higher education: Without passing moral judgment in any way, I will just observe it is astonishing that higher education in this country has managed to get established a system where consumers have to disclose in detail how much money they have before they ... Price Discrimination in Education
Financial reform and foreign stocks
The WSJ reported on Tuesday that moves by Daimler and other European, especially German, companies to shed their U.S. listings indicate that many of these firms “have come to view [a U.S. listing] as a liability.” The exodus will leave just four major German companies with U.S. listings. The WSJ notes that the costs have ... Financial reform and foreign stocks
Welcome Larry Ribstein
I would like to welcome our new colleague, with two brief anecdotes if readers will permit. Four years ago I was a student in a corporate research seminar. That seminar was taught by my mentor, someone with whom Larry has had vibrant scholarly debate. The class was listening to a guest lecturer, a law professor ... Welcome Larry Ribstein
Taxing private equity
The venerable debate over carried interest compensation of private equity managers is heating up again. The NYT’s Andrew Sorkin is predicting Congress will vote to tax it as ordinary income rather than capital gains, which Sorkin thinks is a good thing: Under their current partnership structure, however, [private equity] general partners * * * receive ... Taxing private equity