Affiliation:
1. Università degli Studi di Milano Bicocca Milan Italy
2. CREST CEPII Heriot‐Watt University Paris France
Abstract
AbstractWe show that the heavy use of legal services relative to output in the US is not a peculiarity of the country but applies to common law countries in general. It can likely be attributed largely to better ability to contract and adapt to changes in the environment. Yet common law also opens significantly more room for rent seeking by lawyers than civil law. Thereby the costs could outweigh the benefits. In supporting this last thesis, we control for other factors besides common law favouring legal services, including real output per capita, openness, and ease of entry into the legal profession.
Subject
Economics, Econometrics and Finance (miscellaneous),Economics and Econometrics
Reference80 articles.
1. Common law and civil laws as pro‐market adaptations;Arruñada B.;Journal of Law and Policy,2008