This Essay explores the merits of a new criterion for default rules in incomplete contracts: filling gaps with terms that are favorable to the party with the greater bargaining power. It argues that some of the more common gaps in contracts involve purely distributive issues, such as the contract price, for which it is impossible to choose a unique, joint-maximizing, most efficient term. Instead, the term that mimics the hypothetical bargain in these settings must be sensitive to the bargaining power of the parties-the term they would have chosen to divide the surplus in light of their relative bargaining strengths. This Essay explores the justifications for such a bargain- mimicking principle, the ways in which it could be implemented by...
Contracts that result from the abuse of unequal bargaining power have long been a concern of contrac...
This thesis comprises two essays linked by their focus on problems in contracting and by their usage...
To demonstrate the need for a unified instrumental framework for deciding gaps and implying liabilit...
This Essay explores the merits of a new criterion for default rules in incomplete contracts: filling...
This article explores the merits of a new criterion for default rules in incomplete contracts: fill ...
This article explores the merits of a new criterion for default rules in incomplete contracts: fill ...
This Essay explores the merits of a new criterion for default rules in incomplete contracts: filling...
The legal rules of contracts and corporations can be divided into two distinct classes. The larger c...
Traditionally, courts have refused to compensate disappointed bargainers for reliance costs incurred...
Drawing from a model of bargaining behavior based on transaction cost economics, relational theories...
When contracts are incomplete, the law must rely on default rules to resolve any issues that have no...
When contracts are incomplete, the law must rely on default rules to resolve any issues that have no...
Contracts that result from the abuse of unequal bargaining power have long been a concern of contrac...
A central question of contract law remains: when should the law supply a term not expressly agreed t...
To demonstrate the need for a unified instrumental framework for deciding gaps and implying liabilit...
Contracts that result from the abuse of unequal bargaining power have long been a concern of contrac...
This thesis comprises two essays linked by their focus on problems in contracting and by their usage...
To demonstrate the need for a unified instrumental framework for deciding gaps and implying liabilit...
This Essay explores the merits of a new criterion for default rules in incomplete contracts: filling...
This article explores the merits of a new criterion for default rules in incomplete contracts: fill ...
This article explores the merits of a new criterion for default rules in incomplete contracts: fill ...
This Essay explores the merits of a new criterion for default rules in incomplete contracts: filling...
The legal rules of contracts and corporations can be divided into two distinct classes. The larger c...
Traditionally, courts have refused to compensate disappointed bargainers for reliance costs incurred...
Drawing from a model of bargaining behavior based on transaction cost economics, relational theories...
When contracts are incomplete, the law must rely on default rules to resolve any issues that have no...
When contracts are incomplete, the law must rely on default rules to resolve any issues that have no...
Contracts that result from the abuse of unequal bargaining power have long been a concern of contrac...
A central question of contract law remains: when should the law supply a term not expressly agreed t...
To demonstrate the need for a unified instrumental framework for deciding gaps and implying liabilit...
Contracts that result from the abuse of unequal bargaining power have long been a concern of contrac...
This thesis comprises two essays linked by their focus on problems in contracting and by their usage...
To demonstrate the need for a unified instrumental framework for deciding gaps and implying liabilit...