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Choice of Law: An Empirical Analysis
Author(s) -
Sanga Sarath
Publication year - 2014
Publication title -
journal of empirical legal studies
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.529
H-Index - 24
eISSN - 1740-1461
pISSN - 1740-1453
DOI - 10.1111/jels.12059
Subject(s) - convergence (economics) , jurisdiction , choice of law , law , economics , econometrics , political science , macroeconomics
I propose a new measure to study the law and economics of choice of law: “relative use of law.” Relative use of law measures the extent to which a state's laws are disproportionally over‐ or underutilized in contract. It is constructed by normalizing the distribution of choice of law clauses by the extent of contracting activity within each jurisdiction. Using this measure, I study choice of law by analyzing the nearly 1,000,000 contracts that have been disclosed to the Securities and Exchange Commission between 1996–2012. These are all contracts that companies registered with the SEC deemed “material.” I find that (1) only D elaware and N ew Y ork are relatively overutilized and (2) firms' choice of law and relative use of law are converging toward D elaware, N ew Y ork, and Nevada. I offer hypotheses for this convergence that are based on (1) lock‐in effects of the choice of state of incorporation and (2) positive network effects of using the same law. I present suggestive evidence that lock‐in effects explain convergence toward D elaware and Nevada, while network effects explain convergence toward N ew Y ork.

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