Citizens vs. banks: institutional drivers of financial market litigiousness in Brazil


Autoria(s): Salama, Bruno Meyerhof; Pinheiro, Thiago Jabor
Data(s)

30/09/2013

30/09/2013

30/09/2013

Resumo

This article analyzes the institutional drivers of Brazil’s alarmingly high levels of litigation between clients and financial institutions. Most of the policy oriented literature that explores that phenomenon discusses the impacts of a perceived debtor-friendly bias of Brazilian courts on generating feedback loops of litigation that further increases interest rates and creates adverse selection within the pool of potential debtors. This literature therefore addresses the way courts behave once disputes reach their doorstep; conversely, we take a step back to understand the underlying reasons for why such a large number of disputes end up in courts in the first place. We accordingly attribute endemic litigation in Brazilian financial markets to a framework of political, economic and legal institutions and circumstances, which this article aims to unbound and explain.

Identificador

http://hdl.handle.net/10438/11192

Idioma(s)

en_US

Relação

DIREITO GV Research Paper Series - Legal Studies;72

Palavras-Chave #Litigation #Institutions #Credit markets #Courts #Regulation #Mercado financeiro - Brasil
Tipo

Working Paper