Conflicts of Interest, Ethical Standards, and Competition in Legal Services
Abstract
We study how the legal profession manages representational conflicts of interest.
Such conflicts arise when the same law firm represents clients with adverse interests. They may compromise the legal process, ultimately jeopardizing social welfare. We argue that current ethical standards, emphasizing disqualification, may actually worsen the clients’ situation. Instead, the clients’ interests are today mainly
protected by law firms being small. Despite low market concentration, law firms enjoy high earnings as representational conflicts create negative network externalities at the firm level. These profits are not eroded even in the long run as entry occurs
through firm splitups.
Publisher
University of Gothenburg
Other description
JEL: K40, L13, L22, L44, L84
Collections
View/ Open
Date
2022-04Author
Bouckaert, Jan
Stennek, Johan
Keywords
law firms
professional services
dual representation
representational conflicts of interest
ethical standards
Chinese walls
recusals
negative network externalities
competition;
self-regulation
Publication type
report
ISSN
1403-2465
Series/Report no.
Working papers no 820
Language
eng