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« Economic Consequences of Legal Origins », La Porta, Lopez-de-Silanes, Shleifer, (2008)

« Economic Consequences of Legal Origins », La Porta, Lopez-de-Silanes, Shleifer, (2008). LLSV (1997-98) and further Contributions. Legal rules of investor protection can be measured and coded across countries using national commercial (primarily corporate and bankruptcy) laws.

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« Economic Consequences of Legal Origins », La Porta, Lopez-de-Silanes, Shleifer, (2008)

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  1. « Economic Consequences of Legal Origins », La Porta, Lopez-de-Silanes, Shleifer, (2008)

  2. LLSV (1997-98) and further Contributions • Legal rules of investor protection can be measured and coded across countries using national commercial (primarily corporate and bankruptcy) laws. • Coding showed some countries offer stronger investor protections than others. • Countries with more protective laws have more developed capital markets • Legal rules protecting investors vary systematically among legal traditions (LOs): • Laws of common law countries are more protective of outside investors than the laws of civil law, and particularly French civil law countries. • Civil law shows a heavier hand of government ownership and regulation • LO predicts government ownership of banks (LLS 2002), burden of entry regulations (DLLS 2002), regulations of labor markets (BLLS 2004), incidence of military conscription (MS 2005a,b), and government media ownership (Djankov et al. 2003c). • These indicators are associated with adverse impacts on markets, such as greater corruption, larger unofficial economy, and higher unemployment. • Common law is associated with lower formalism of judicial procedures (DLLS 2003b) and greater judicial independence (LLSP 2004) than civil law. • These indicators are associated with better contract enforcement and greater security of property rights.

  3. Background on Legal Origins • McNeill/McNeill (2003) show how information transmission shapes human societies: • Information (i.e., technology, language, religion, sports, law and legal systems) is transmitted through trade, conquest, colonization, missionary work, migration, etc.. • Some information are transplanted voluntarily, as when people adopt technologies they need  difficult to study consequences since it may be endogenous. • In other cases, transplantation is involuntary, as in forced religious conversion, conquest, or colonization  easier to identify the consequences. • Legal origins or traditions present a key example of such often involuntary transmission of different bundles of information across human populations (Watson 1974). • Transplantation covers specific laws and codes, individuals with mother-country training and human capital, general approaches/ideologies of the legal system, and elements of the organization of the judiciary. • Of course, national laws evolved/adapted to local cultural, religious, and economic conditions, so the legal and regulatory systems of no two countries are identical. • But individualization was not complete, so basic transplanted elements have persisted allowing classification into legal families (David/Brierley 1985, Reynolds/Flores 1989)

  4. The distribution of Legal Origin Legal Origins = English = French = German = Scandinavian = Socialist Legal Origins Legal Origins = English = English = French = French = German = German = Scandinavian = Scandinavian = Socialist = Socialist

  5. Legal Origin, Institutions, and Outcomes

  6. Table I: Financial Institutions and Capital Markets Development(Bar Graph of Negative dummies of Legal Origins in Panel A)(Under construction!!!)

  7. Financial Institutions and Capital Markets Development:Size and Breath of Stock Markets

  8. Financial Institutions and Capital Markets Development:Private Credit and Interest Rate Spreads

  9. Table I: Financial Institutions and Capital Markets Development(Bar Graph of Negative dummies of Legal Origins in Panel A)(Under construction!!!)

  10. Government RegulationCorruption and Unofficial Economy

  11. Government Regulationand Labor Market Outcomes

  12. Table III: Judicial Institutions (Bar Graph of Negative dummies of Legal Origins in Panel A)(Under construction!!!)

  13. Judicial InstitutionsCourt Efficiency and Contract Enforcement

  14. Summary of the evidence so far • The economic consequences of Legal Origins are pervasive • Compared to the French civil law, common law is associated with: • Better investor protection which in turn is associated with improved financial development, better access to finance, and higher ownership dispersion, • Lighter government ownership and regulation which are in turn associated with less corruption, better functioning labor markets, and smaller unofficial economies, and • Less formalized and more independent judicial systems which are in turn associated with more secure property rights and better contract enforcement. • Most important aspect of the results is how pervasive is the influence of LOs.

  15. Pervasive influence of LOs and the Legal Origin Theory • Assuming this evidence is correct, it raises an enormous challenge of interpretation: • What is the meaning of LO? How can it account for all these correlations? • Following comparative legal scholars, we adopt a broad conception of LO as a style of social control of economic life: • “Civil law is “policy implementing”, common law is “dispute resolving” (Damaska 1986). • French civil law embraces “socially-conditioned private contracting,” in contrast to common law’s support for “unconditioned private contracting” (Pistor 2006). • Zweigert/Kotz characterize legal families not only by the purely judicial institutions (i.e., legal procedures, forms of legal change, patterns of judicial recruitment), but also by the broader attitude, philosophy, or ideology: “The style of a legal system may be marked by an ideology, that is, a religious or political conception of how economic or social life should be organized” (p. 72). • Legal OriginsTheory adopts this broader conception: • Legal families are expressions of fundamental approaches to solving social problems • LOs reflect social attitudes and ideology that lead to large investments not only on legal infrastructure, but also on human capital educating politicians, judges, lawyers, etc.. These investments are not irreversible, but are costly to reverse. • This view explains why when faced with a problem, LOs address them in their own style.

  16. Three Implications of the Historical Analysis for the Economic Consequences of LOs • Common law’s built-in Judicial Independence, specially for cases of administrative acts affecting individuals  more respectful of private property and contracts (LLPS 2004) • Common Law’s emphasis on Judicial Resolution of Private Disputes (vs. legislation) as a solution to social problems  greater emphasis on private contracts & orderings, less on government regulation. • Its regulation aims to facilitate private contracting rather than to direct particular outcomes. • Pistor (2006): French LO embraces socially-conditioned private contracting. • Damaska (1986): civil law is “policy-implementing;” common law is “dispute resolving.” • Common Law’s Adaptability benefits: • Greater respect for jurisprudence as a source of law suggests they will be more adaptable to changing circumstances (Hayek 1960, Levine 2005). • Through sequential decisions by appellate courts, it evolves for the better and toward more efficient legal rules (Posner 1973, Rubin 1977, Priest 1977).

  17. The Historical Narratives and the Interpretation of evidence • Evidence on judicial independence is a direct confirmation of the historical account: • Common law has less formalized contract enforcement, longer constitutional tenure of Supreme Court judges and greater recognition of case law as a source of law. • These characteristics are predictors of the efficiency of contract enforcement – measured both objectively and subjectively – and of the security of property rights. • Evidence on government regulation: consistent with styles for addressing social problems: • Civil law: more likely through government ownership and mandates • Common law: more likely to do so through private contract and litigation. • Common law’s regulation supports private contracting vs. dictates outcomes. • Evidence on finance is also consistent: • Better shareholder & creditor protection in common law than in French civil law is consistent with the historical narrative of the greater security of private property. • Common law may have advantage in financial markets because they change quickly, i.e., the adaptability of judge-made law, as in Delaware courts (Beck et al, 2003).

  18. Legal Origins Theory:Why so much Hysterisis? • How has the influence of LOs persisted over decades or centuries? • What did the British boats bring so different from what the French or the Spaniards brought? • If all transplanted were attitudes toward social control, the effects would not be so persistent. • So, what got transplanted were laws and attitudes that require investments to provide the mechanisms to address social problems in a society. • These attitudes have persisted due to the vast investments required in writing laws and educating and training people in them. • The legal system provides a style, and it is that system (as defined by Zweigert/Kotz), with its codes, distinctive institutions, modes of thought and even ideologies, that is very slow to change.  It is not irreversible, but it would require large investments to be destroyed.

  19. Legal Origins Theory:Why so much Hysterisis? (2) • When private orderings get into a crisis, the civil law approach is to repress it or replace it with state mandates, while the common law is to shore up markets: • Example: Response to the Great Depression and financial crises of the 20th c: • Civil law countries: bank nationalization, and suppression of stock markets. • US: introduction of securities and banking regulation, and deposit insurance. • Civil law tends to expand government control when a need arises: • Example: Napoleon’s expansion of military conscription, made possible by the existing presence of bureaucracy that could administer the draft (MS 2005b). • State’s presence is less pervasive in common law, so it relies less on administrative solutions, and more on “market-supporting” or “dispute-resolving” ones. • Civil law tends to expand public involvement in new spheres: • Some historians argue that since LOs have differed for centuries, we should observe equal differences in rules and regulations in the 19th c.  This is not true: • Public intervention in markets changes over time and responds to social needs or political imperatives, so laws and regulations will change as well, but in ways consistent with national legal traditions: • Labor laws and securities laws are 20th-c. laws responding to social needs. Yet, they took different forms in countries from different legal traditions.

  20. Legal Origin and Culture • Stulz and Williamson (2003) suggest that, in light of the hostility of some of the religious traditions to lending on interest, religion may be a more fundamental determinant of legal rules governing creditor protection than LO. • Licht et al. (2005) present a more sweeping theoretical and empirical case for culture, using broad psychological measures of cultural attitudes. • However: • Religion is not as important a determinant of creditor rights as LO. • Most indices of cultural attitudes do not influence creditor rights holding LO constant: • A nation’s masculinity is not conducive to creditor protection, while belief in the independence of children is, • But neither of these makes a big dent in the effect of LO on creditor rights. • LLSV do not propose that culture is unimportant. But the effects of LOs remain large. • The notion of culture LLSV consider focus on religion and broad social attitudes. One can alternatively include in culture beliefs about the law, regulation, and the role of the state. This theory of culture would then be broadly consistent with the view of LLSV.

  21. Creditor Rights, Culture and Legal Origin:Percentage of Catholic Population

  22. Creditor Rights, Culture and Legal Origin:Percentage of People that say Strangers can be Trusted

  23. Legal Origins and Politics • Politics presents a broader challenge to the explanatory power of LO: • Hellwig (2000), Rajan and Zingales (2003), Pagano and Volpin (2005, 2006), Perotti and von Thadden (2006), Roe (2006), and Mueller and Philippon (2006). • They mostly deal with Western Europe or the Wealthy West. Political theories: • Sometime in mid 20th c. Continental European countries formed alliances between families that controlled firms and (typically organized) labor. • The alliances were: (1) a response to crises from hyperinflation, depression, or defeat in war; (2) sought to win elections and secure insiders’ economic rents away from the “outsiders,” such as unorganized labor, minority shareholders, corporate challengers, or potential entrants. • When these alliances won elections, they wrote legal rules to benefit themselves: • Families got poor protection of outside shareholders  keep control benefits • Labor got social security & worker protection laws keep employment & wages. • Families and labor got the laws protecting them against product market competition.

  24. Legal Origins and Politics (2) • Continental Europe vs the US in the 20th c.: • The political story is part of a broader narrative of Continental European history in the 20th c., in which the response to crisis is characterized by the rise of proportional representation (Alesina & Glaeser 2004, Persson & Tabellini 2003), socialist politics (Alesina & Glaeser 2004), and social democracy (Roe 2000). • The US was spared from these events, so it did not get the laws adopted on the Continent. • The legal rules observed in the data, are thus outcomes of this democratic process, and not of “permanent” conditions, such as LOs. • If politics were appropriately controlled for in the regressions, LO would not matter. • Some implications of political theories are plausible and broadly consistent with the evidence: • Countries with strong shareholder protections have weak protections of labor and low regulations of entry. • We see social democracies in Continental Europe but not in the US.

  25. Legal Origins and Politics:An analysis of the Political Theory • What is the evidence when political variables are added to the regressions? • Regressions of legal and institutional rules on 3 variables of the political theories: • Proportional representation = Form of democracy seen as an adaptation to political demands of labor in the early 20thc.  Only for democracies! • % years in 1928-95 when chief executive and largest party in legislature were leftist or centrist. • Union density = % total work force affiliated to labor unions in 1997. • Results: • Political variables explain the variation in legal rules only occasionally. • LOs continue to explain the variation even with political variables in, and the difference between common law and French civil law remains highly statistically significant. • Each political variable is surely measured with error, and specifications may not capture the full subtlety of the political theories, but political variables are rarely significant in contrast with LOs.

  26. Politics and Legal Origin

  27. Legal Origins and Politics:An analysis of the Political Theory (2) • Does the democratic process lead to the observed legal rules? • This is a key implication of all the political models: it predicts that the relationship between LOs and laws should not hold outside democracies. • But under legal theories, LO should predict legal rules in both autocracies and democracies. • Note of caution: • It is NOT the conclusion of LLSV, nor their belief, that politics do not matter for corporate governance, government regulation, or the structure of the judiciary. • The critics offered a different hypothesis, namely that LO is just a stand-in for politics. • For this hypothesis, there is no support.

  28. Table IX: Legal origin in countries with Autocratic governments(5 graphs of the negative dummies of Legal Origins in the various groups of variables)Under Construction !!!!

  29. Table IX: Legal origin in countries with Autocratic governments(5 graphs of the negative dummies of Legal Origins in the various groups of variables)Under Construction !!!!

  30. Legal Origins and Historical Arguments • Suggests the correlation between common law and finance is a 20thc. phenomenon: • If we look at data in the early 20thc the correlation does not exist. Since LOs predate the 20thc, they cannot account for the differences in financial development. • Rajan & Zingales (2003) is the starting critique. Using individual country sources, they show stock market capitalization to GDP as of 1913 for 6 common law and 18 civil law countries (10 French). • Focused on finance  But an alternative theory must address all the evidence! • The Historical Argument has two component parts: • In 1913, French civil law countries had more developed financial markets than common law countries: • RZ’s 1913 sample: 5 common law countries had average stock market to GDP of 53%, compared to 66% for the 10 French civil law countries. • Correlation of common law and financial development emerges over the 20thc, inconsistent with LLSV: • In the “Great Reversal,” the initial (1913) French LO superiority disappears with MarketCap/GDP ratios of 130% and 74% in 1999 for common law and French civil law countries (RZ 2003).

  31. Stock market capitalization over GDP (based on Rajan and Zingales, 2003)

  32. Legal Origins and Historical Arguments (2) • Measurement Problems in Several Countries: • The relevant measure to test LOs’ influence is a country’s capitalization of equities listed on that country’s stock exchange(s) whose shareholders are subject to the country’s legal protection. • RZ undertook to find such numbers, but doing so for early 20thc is difficult because: • Many securities trading were bonds rather than stocks, and many were government bonds. • Many firms listed were incorporated or had primary listings, in Europe/U.S. • So, for a given country, these factors may lead to an overestimate of market value of stocks subject to national shareholder protection laws. For example: A) Cuba: RZ’s most financially developed country in 1913 [MktCap/GDP = 219%]. • The largest company with listed stock was Havana Electric (incorporated in New Jersey) • If one excludes bonds and looks only at stocks, the Cuba ratio falls to 33% and the French civil law average goes from 66% to 47% (i.e., below their common law average). B) Egypt: RZ’s second most financially developed country in 1913 [MktCap/GDP =109%]. • It appears it includes debt (Tignor, 1984). Largest firms incorporated/listed in UK or France. • We estimate a correct observation for Egypt of at most 40% C) Rich countries: • France: RZ estimate 78%, but a recent estimate by Bozio (2002) puts it at 54%. • US: RZ has 39%, but Sylla (2006) proposes the 95% from Goldsmith (1985).

  33. Legal Origins and Historical Arguments (3) • Compare the two mother countries: England and France. • RZ recognize that England was more financially developed than France in early 20th c. • Standard narratives see Paris as a financial backwater (Kindleberger 1984). • A formal comparison is possible using France, from Bozio (2002), and UK, from Michie (1999), and adjusting to exclude corporate bonds using Goldsmith (1985). • Common and civil law countries in 1913 based on Goldsmith (1985): • Consistent with Kindleberger, Britain is ahead of France as far back as the middle of the 19th c., and perhaps even earlier. So, interestingly, is the United States. • Using US 1912 data, Goldsmith has 4 common law and 7 civil law countries. Even with India pulling way down the common law average and no underdeveloped civil law country in 1913’s sample: Common law = 88%;French LO (France & Belgium) = 77%;Overall Civil law = 69%. • Goldsmith’s data has its own problems. But it independently confirms that the relative financial underdevelopment of common law in early 20th c. is a myth. Conclusion: • Contrary to RZ (2003), common law countries appear to be more financially developed than civil law ones at the start of the 20th c, and in particular Britain is ahead of France. • Over the 20th c the differences have widened, which needs to be explained. • The alleged Great Reversal that animated political and historical writings did not really happen.

  34. Stock market capitalization over GDP France and Great Britain

  35. Table XI: Stock market capitalization over GDP (Goldsmith 1985)

  36. Legal Origins and Historical Arguments: (2) Britain at the start of the 20th c. • Argument: • Britain had a reasonably developed stock market in early 20th c, with beginnings of ownership dispersion, but that this had nothing to do with the law (Cheffins 2001, Franks et al. 2005). • Based on LLSV index and legal rulings, they see UK shareholders only weakly protected. So, English financial development is due to the bonding role of financial intermediaries and trust. • Counter-argument: That British shareholders were utterly unprotected is controversial: • Britain led the world in securities regulation in general, and corporate disclosure in particular (Coffee 2001, Gower 1954, and Sylla and Smith 1995). • Britain passed Directors Liability Act in 1890, and Companies Act in 1900, mandating significant prospectus disclosure, and holding directors accountable for inaccuracies. • Legislation in early 20th c mandated on-going financial disclosure, and addressed some abuses in the new issues market Coffee (2001). • Britain also had perhaps the best commercial courts in the world, with most professional and least corrupt judges, with centuries of precedent and experience at dealing with fraud. • Bottom line: • Standstill: British shareholder protection glass was half empty or half full. • Frustration: Except for some US vs Britain points, the literature is NOT comparative. We know little of how the British shareholders were protected compared to French and German ones. • To rescue: Shareholder rights have improved enormously in Britain in the 20th c, parallel to its markets’ growth. Explaining this parallel growth is a challenge to legal and historical accounts.

  37. Legal Origins and Historical Arguments: (3) World War II Destruction • Argument: Roe (2006) • Poor economic performance, particularly associated with the destruction of capital stocks in World War II, radicalized continental European politics, leading to legal rules hostile to financial markets and favorable to labor. • As a test, Roe regresses modern ownership concentration on GDP growth between 1913 and 1945 for 27 countries. He finds countries with worse economic growth have higher ownership concentration. • Comments: • Results fall apart under just about any perturbation: • using a broader sample of countries; • using alternative measures of financial development (e.g. stock market capitalization, block premium, or private credit); or • if we look at other predictions of his theory. • Prediction on ownership concentration: • No scientific reason to selectively throw out data, so we rerun Roe with available sample. • Result: Roe’s correlation disappears (Figure V). • Not surprising: many developing countries have stayed out of World War II, yet have remained financially underdeveloped. • Prediction that World War II devastation leads to pro-labor laws: • Figure VI shows this is not true in a broader sample.

  38. Figure V: Ownership concentration and GDP growth 1913-1945 24 observations 34 observations w/data

  39. Figure VI: Labor laws and GDP growth 1913-1945(sample of 24 observations)Univariate regressionControlling for Common Law

  40. Figure VII: Labor laws and GDP growth 1913-1945(sample of 34 observations, univariate regression)

  41. Legal Origins and Historical Arguments: (4) The 20th century Divergence • We see no evidence for the reversal of financial development rankings in the 20th century between common and civil law countries • But the historical research yields two important findings to explain: • Common law countries have moved ahead of civil law ones in the 20th c (RZ (2003) Figure III). • Unambiguously, investor protection has sharply improved in common law countries over the 20th c (Coffee 1999, Cheffins 2001, Franks et al. 2005). • The 20th c was a period of explosive world economic growth, including of the wealthiest countries: • Growth relied largely on outside capital and was far from smooth (i.e., World Wars, Great Depression, economic and financial crises). • Countries that grew successfully found their own way to deliver capital to firms and survive the crises: • For some, success involved massive state involvement in finance and development. • For others, success relied to a much greater extent on shoring up markets.

  42. Legal Origins and Historical Arguments: (4) The Synthetic account and Divergence • In the middle of the 20th c: • Civil law countries relied heavily on state supply of finance, bank nationalization, and state investment companies to promote economic growth and resolve crises. The standard civil law solutions to addressing social problems, going back at least to Napoleon. • Common law countries, particularly US and UK, shored up markets relying more heavily on market-supporting regulations (i.e., securities laws, deposit insurance, court-led improvements in corporate law). The standard common law solution to social problems. • The differences were not absolute, with many nationalizations in common law countries and many market-supporting reforms in civil law ones. But they were still pronounced (i.e., LLS (2002)’s data on government ownership of banks). • In the second half of the century, the world became a good deal more peaceful and orderly: • Market-supporting solutions of common law, whether in the form of judicial decisions or regulations, worked better than the policy-implementing solutions of civil law. • As a consequence of their 20th c legal and regulatory evolution, common law countries ended up with better investor protections and their financial markets ran away from the civil law ones. • Looking back over the 20th c, we see the basic differences in the legal traditions and regulatory strategies playing out in how both the laws and the markets evolve.

  43. Blueprint of Policy Reform:Measurement ahead of Policy • This research sheds light on the nature of good reforms, and on the specific policy levers. • Helps understand why so many developing countries end up with inefficiently high levels of regulation, especially in the civil law world. • Even in the developed countries, the high levels of regulation of many activities (labor markets and entry) were probably adopted in a less orderly environment, or for reasons of consistency or habit, and as such are excessive for modern markets. • In finance, institutions that replaced markets must now be replaced by those that sustain them. • Developing countries: mismatch between institutions and needs is even greater. • The heavy-handed regulatory policy that might work tolerably well in continental Europe translates into over-regulation, corruption, and suppression of entrepreneurship in the developing world. • Note: even when the measured rules are not the entire problem, and thoughtless formalistic reforms likely to fail, these rules can provide relevant data and point closer where the problem actually lies.

  44. Blueprint of Policy Reform:Measurement ahead of Policy (2) • Recent sketchy evidence is broadly consistent with the optimistic view that in some circumstances the laws we measure are the reason for inefficient outcomes: • Reductions of entry regulations: • 55 countries lowered administrative costs to start a business in 2005-2006 (DB 2006). • Russia: beneficial effects of firm entry after reforms (Yakovlev/Zhuravskaya 2007) • Mixed picture for labor markets: • Labor markets were liberalized in the OECD in the last 15 years, although most reforms pertained to temporary rather than permanent employment (OECD 2006). • No tendency for liberalization in Latin America in the 1990s (Heckman/Pages 2004). • Investor protection: • Improvements in shareholder rights in OECD during the 1990s (Pagano/Volpin 2005). • Tendency toward improving shareholder rights in the EU (Enriques/Volpin (2007)  Although too little to resolve the problem of related-party transactions. • Emerging markets: some examples of improvement, such as Mexican securities laws (Chong/Lopez-de-Silanes 2008) and bankruptcy reform (Gamboa/Schneider 2007). • Much of the evidence is circumstantial, and confined to the developed world. • But if the world remains peaceful and orderly, the attraction of market-friendly reforms will increase.

  45. Conclusions • This research has evolved a great deal in the last 10 years: • Nonetheless, the fundamental LLS contribution appears to be standing: • LOs have significant consequences for the institutional framework of the society, and for economic outcomes. • The range of legal, economic, and social spheres where legal origins have consequences has broadened. • Four propositions appear to be correct: • Legal rules differ systematically across countries, and these differences can be measured and quantified. • Differences in legal rules are significantly accounted for by the differences in LO. • Historical divergence in legal traditions (i.e., policy-implementing focus of civil law versus dispute-resolving focus of common law – explains why legal rules differ. • The measured differences in legal rules matter for economic and social outcomes. • The outlines of a coherent theory have become clearer but not all the empirical issues have been settled, or that the LO theory will survive further scrutiny.

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