Requirements for Effective Contract Enforcement
For contracts to be enforced effectively, a society requires a well-functioning judiciary. This system of courts must be able to resolve disputes in a reasonable timeframe, and its legal processes must be predictable and accessible to the public.
0
1
Tags
Library Science
Economics
Economy
Introduction to Microeconomics Course
Social Science
Empirical Science
Science
CORE Econ
Ch.5 The rules of the game: Who gets what and why - The Economy 2.0 Microeconomics @ CORE Econ
The Economy 2.0 Microeconomics @ CORE Econ
Related
Requirements for Effective Contract Enforcement
Analysis of Investment Climate
Evaluating Institutional Frameworks for Growth
A developing nation is considering several policy initiatives to stimulate long-term economic growth. Given limited resources, which of the following actions would provide the most fundamental and enduring foundation for sustained development?
Investment Decisions and Legal Systems
A government can best promote long-term economic growth by directly funding new businesses and technologies, as this approach is more impactful than establishing and maintaining a costly legal system for protecting private assets and agreements.
Match each description of a country's institutional framework with its most direct economic outcome.
Investment Incentives and Legal Frameworks
The Mechanism of Institutional Impact on Growth
Foreign Investment Decision
The Economic Consequences of Institutional Weakness
Learn After
Evaluating a Judicial System's Fitness for Contract Enforcement
Comparative Analysis of Contract Enforcement Systems
A society's ability to enforce contracts relies on a well-functioning judicial system. Match each scenario below with the specific judicial requirement that is being violated.
A farmer in a developing country has a clear, written agreement with a large corporation to sell their entire harvest at a set price. The corporation accepts the harvest but refuses to pay the agreed-upon amount. The farmer discovers that to file a lawsuit, they must pay a non-refundable court fee that is equivalent to two years of their income, making it impossible for them to seek a legal remedy. This situation primarily highlights a failure in which requirement for effective contract enforcement?
Analyzing Delays in Contract Enforcement
As long as a country has a comprehensive and clear set of written laws governing contracts, its system for contract enforcement is considered effective, even if court cases frequently take over a decade to resolve and are prohibitively expensive for the average citizen.
Designing Reforms for Effective Contract Enforcement
Judicial Predictability and Investment Decisions
Two countries, Alpha and Beta, have identical written laws governing business contracts. However, in Country Alpha, court rulings on contract disputes are often inconsistent, with factually similar cases resulting in widely different outcomes. In contrast, Country Beta's courts consistently apply legal precedents, leading to highly predictable rulings. Based on this information, which economic outcome is the most likely?
Prioritizing Judicial Reforms for Economic Impact