The Role of Nonprofits in the Production of Boilerplate
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Description
Drafting contracts—by which I really mean the documents that embody contracts—requires investments of time, experience, and ingenuity. Those investments may yield significant returns because the quality of contractual terms can be an important determinant of the gains that parties realize from trade. This in turn suggests that from an economic perspective, it is important to understand how contractual terms and, in particular, widely used “boilerplate” terms are produced. Recent academic literature on this topic has focused on production of boilerplate by either for-profit actors—whether for their own use or for use by their clients—or the state. The dominant theme is that for-profit actors typically have suboptimal incentives to invest in production of contractual terms because they often cannot capture all of the benefits that flow from those investments. As for the state, the main concern is that it lacks the competence to formulate contracts that are suited to the diverse needs of private commercial actors.
Source Publication
Boilerplate: The Foundation of Market Contracts
Source Editors/Authors
Omri Ben-Shahar
Publication Date
2007
Recommended Citation
Davis, Kevin E., "The Role of Nonprofits in the Production of Boilerplate" (2007). Faculty Chapters. 286.
https://gretchen.law.nyu.edu/fac-chapt/286
