The Yale Law Journal

Results for 'interest rates australia'

Forum: Privacy and Security Across Borders

over technology companies 0n the fact that they serve Australians, even if they lack a physical presence in Australia—a far-reaching assertion of

Forum: International Cooperation and the 2017 Tax Act

another example, the Australian Multinational Anti-Avoidance Law seeks to re-attribute to Australia certain income derived by multinationals from sales to

The Growth of Litigation Finance in DOJ Whistleblower Suits: Implications and Recommendations

interest” in the litigation. This Note therefore proposes three strategies for doing so. First, courts have long protected exchanges of privileged

Financing the Class: Strengthening the Class Action Through Third-Party Investment

couple third-party funding with competitive price setting. Under this proposal, the plaintiffs’ attorney auctions off an interest in his potential fee

Forum: Democracy and Legitimacy in Investor-State Arbitration

Australia only recently saw the end of a long-running dispute with Philip Morris over a public health measure that the tobacco company deemed an

Forum: Opaque Capital and Mass-Tort Financing

“Boling Funding Agreements”). The Boling Funding Agreements provided a nonrecourse loan to the plaintiff but contained arguably usurious rates of interest

Probate Lending

their effective interest rates, and whether estates with loans are more likely to degenerate into litigation than their counterparts. This trove of

Cost-Benefit Analysis of Financial Regulation: Case Studies and Implications

a principle of monetary policy that stipulates how much the Federal Reserve (or any central bank) should change nominal interest rates in response to

Forum: The Punishment Bureaucracy: How to Think About “Criminal Justice Reform”

of subsistence goods.) Our political choices answer important questions: Should it be a crime to beg for money? To charge high interest rates? To

Forum: Dereliction of Duty: State-Bar Inaction in Response to America’s Access-to-Justice Crisis

“public interest,” states should dig deeper and be more specific about what they want their rules to accomplish. The assessment should start with the