Georgetown University Law Center and Yale Law School are hosting the Third Conference on Law and Macroeconomics online on October 15, 2020. The deadline for submitting papers is September 8, 2020.
CALL FOR PAPERS
The economic devastation caused by Covid-19 triggered a slew of new research on the law’s role in mediating the business cycle, economic growth, and inequality. We welcome submissions for an online conference on October 15, 2020, that will continue to explore connections between law and the macroeconomy.
Papers may address the role of law, regulation, and institutions in:
- Monetary policy, both conventional and unconventional, and the payments system, including the impact of new platforms and technologies;
- Financial regulatory policy, including the effect on the business cycle and economic growth, crisis containment and resolution, access to capital and other aspects of financial inclusion;
- Fiscal policy to reduce the depth and frequency, and mitigate the effects of economic downturns, including the respective roles of federal, state, and local governments;
- Moderating recessions with other policy levers, including bankruptcy, contract, and property law, environmental, utility, and labour regulation, and investment and capital controls; and
- Reducing inequality, including policies affecting labour and employment relationships, competition, access to housing, healthcare, and other public services, and personal, corporate and public debt relief.
We hope to attract submissions from both legal scholars writing about macro-relevant topics and economists writing on subjects that would benefit from legal perspectives.
Submissions from students and others not in tenure- track positions are especially welcomed— there will be a special panel for such scholarship.
We also encourage submissions from all perspectives and areas of law that may help illuminate the intersection between law and macroeconomics and inform action to mitigate the pain and uncertainty caused by the economic downturn.
Over lunch, Greg Kaplan, Professor of Economics at the University of Chicago and Claudia Sahm, Director of Macroeconomic Policy at the Washington Center for Equitable Growth, will provide a non-technical overview of recent developments in macroeconomics that a legal audience should know. In a featured panel, Helene Rey, Lord Bagri Professor of Economics at London Business School, will present her research on carbon pricing and climate change; legal scholars with expertise in different aspects of the topic, such as international trade law and international tax law, will offer comments.
Papers for consideration should be submitted on or before September 8.
Leave a Reply