Showing posts with label economic theory. Show all posts
Showing posts with label economic theory. Show all posts

Wednesday, 11 June 2014

Yale-Humboldt Consumer Law Lecture

Last Friday one of the authors of the blog attended the first Yale-Humboldt Consumer Law Lecture. The lecture aims at encouraging the exchange between U.S. and European lawyers in the field of consumer law and is organised by Professor Susanne Augenhofer from Humboldt University in Berliln. For the first lecture she invited three distinguished professors from Yale Law School: Alan Schwartz, Roberta Romano and Daniel Markovits. 

In his presentation on 'Regulating for Rationality' Alan Schwartz argued that even though experimental results in psychology and behavioral economics have shown that consumers do not always act as the model of homo oeconomicus would suggest, regulators should retain the rationality premise. As long as there is no general psychological theory on how laboratory results are likely to translate into market results, regulators should stick with disclosure regulation.

Roberta Romano gave a lecture on 'The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB) and the Iron Law of Financial Regulation'. She showed that the CFPB was created in the midst of a financial crises and pointed at the risks of such crisis-driven legislation. She suggested to sunset legislation, so that all provisions must be reviewed and reenacted after a fixed time period. Furthermore, she encouraged small scale experimentation and flexibility in implementation. 

Daniel Markowits ('Sharing Ex Ante and Sharing Ex Post') argued that understanding fiduciary law requires a model besides contract. He showed that the core duties of the two relations differ. In contract law it is good faith, in fiduciary law it is fidelity or loyalty and care. Another difference is that contract partners share ex ante while fiduciaries share ex post.

Another interesting event will take place in Berlin on October 20th. Oren Bar-Gill (NYU, Harvard) will be talking about 'The Future of Consumer Law'. Looking forward to that!


Wednesday, 15 August 2012

Summer reading

While many legal institutions are taking a Summer break, news on legislative processes and case law is somewhat scarce. Those of you (back or still) at work looking for some reading materials related to consumer issues may therefore take the opportunity to read up on the pending proposal for a Common European Sales Law (CESL) or on the legal, political and economic aspects of the ongoing economic crisis in the EU.

Some relatively recent reading tips on the CESL include:

Readers interested in economics and political science may want to consult Professor Eichengreen's reading list. Personally, I would add Sylvia Nasar's 'Grand Pursuit: A Story of Economic Genius', which beautifully recounts the development of economic theory from Dickens's times till today.