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On Regulatory ArbitrageJordan M. BarryUniversity of San Diego School of Law June 7, 2011 Texas Law Review, Vol. 89, No. 2, 2011 Abstract: This comment supplements and critiques the analytical framework put forth by Victor Fleischer in his recent work, Regulatory Arbitrage. It makes three main points. First, professional constraints on regulatory arbitrage are more valuable than has previously been acknowledged. Second, Fleischer correctly highlights how ongoing relationships allow parties to change the structures of their transactions to avoid regulations, yet still asserts that anti-avoidance legal rules are among the most effective tools to prevent regulatory arbitrage. Surprisingly, Fleischer understates this argument by failing to consider the extent to which such rules prevent family members, who are frequently joined by the tightest bonds of all, from engaging in regulatory arbitrage. Lastly, this comment takes issue with analogizing regulatory arbitrage to financial arbitrage, as well as the proposed categorization of various types of regulatory arbitrage. Each of these approaches diverts attention away from the underlying cause of regulatory arbitrage: legal rules that do not accurately track the economic substance of transactions.
Number of Pages in PDF File: 10 Keywords: Regulatory Arbitrage, Tax, Regulatory Competition, Transaction Costs, Transaction Structures Accepted Paper SeriesDate posted: June 9, 2011Suggested CitationContact Information
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