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Legal cycles and stabilization rules

In: The Timing of Lawmaking

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  • Frank Fagan

Abstract

A legal cycle is legislation that takes effect contingently, where contingent factors are ex ante known to fluctuate with some level of predictable regularity. Apart from broad constitutional mandate, lawmakers have historically and suboptimally responded to legal cycles with general and patchwork patterns of legislation involving repeal, amendment, and new enactment. This is true across nearly all domains of codified law. This chapter develops a normative theory of how lawmakers should respond to legal cycles by setting forth the optimal architecture of stabilization rules. Under a general set of conditions, stabilization rules work toward smoothing fluctuations in rulemaking and exert downward pressure on short-term legislative pathologies that result from cognitive bias and interest group politics. The potential of welfare-enhancing stabilization rules is discussed across banking law, budget law, environmental law, health law, national security law, and criminal sentencing. Keywords: timing rules, contingent law, legal cycles, stabilization rules, climate change, budget law, availability bias

Suggested Citation

  • Frank Fagan, 2017. "Legal cycles and stabilization rules," Chapters, in: Frank Fagan & Saul Levmore (ed.), The Timing of Lawmaking, chapter 1, pages 11-33, Edward Elgar Publishing.
  • Handle: RePEc:elg:eechap:16931_1
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    Cited by:

    1. Luigi Alberto Franzoni, 2019. "Legal Change in the Face of Risk-Averse Subjects: A Generalization of the Theory," American Law and Economics Review, American Law and Economics Association, vol. 21(2), pages 394-430.

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    Keywords

    Economics and Finance; Law - Academic;

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