Author Archives: Jeff Sovern

Guest Post by Mark Budnitz on why opt-in is the only fair method in pre-dispute arbitration agreements

Recently, the blog posted two items (here and here) arguing that the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau should issue a rule barring the use of arbitration clauses unless consumers opt in to them. The second item was in reply to Mark Levin's blog post at Ballard Spahr's Consumer Finance Monitor blog response to our first blog […]

A reply to Mark Levin’s claims about my proposal for a new CFPB arbitration rule

by Jeff Sovern Last week, I suggested that the CFPB adopt a new arbitration rule. Yesterday, Ballard Spahr's Mark Levin commented on my proposal, in a blog post titled Professor Sovern’s opt-in arbitration proposal is neither new nor supportable. This post responds to some of Mr. Levin's arguments. Mr. Levin wrote that my suggestion would […]

WSJ: Amazon eliminates arbitration clause after facing 75,000 arbitration demands by Echo users

Here. Excerpt: *  * With no announcement, the company recently changed its terms of service to allow customers to file lawsuits. Already, it faces at least three proposed class actions, including one brought May 18 alleging the company’s Alexa-powered Echo devices recorded people without permission. The retail giant made the change after plaintiffs’ lawyers flooded […]

Study explores effect of increase in minimum payments on actual payment amounts

Paolina C. Medina of Texas A&M University and Jose L. Negrin of the Banco de Mexico have written The Hidden Role of Contract Terms: Evidence from Credit Card Minimum Payments in Mexico, Management Science (2021). Here is the abstract: This paper argues that thresholds in financial contracts act as implicit nudges in consumers’ decisions. Exploiting […]

Study suggests consumers assume product quality may be higher than it is when sellers withhold information from them

The American Economic Association has a report on the study here. The actual paper, Is No News (Perceived As) Bad News? An Experimental Investigation of Information Disclosure by Ginger Zhe Jin, Michael Luca, & Daniel Martin, is here. Here's the abstract: This paper uses laboratory experiments to directly test a central prediction of disclosure theory: that […]

A suggestion to the CFPB for a new arbitration rule

by Jeff Sovern I have a suggestion for the CFPB relating to arbitration. Many readers will know this background, but for those who don't: in 2010, Congress enacted the Dodd-Frank Act, which in section 1028 directed the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau to study arbitration. The statute also authorized the Bureau to regulate consumer financial arbitration […]

Former CFPB staffer Eric Blankenstein, who left under a cloud, calls CFPB “criminal syndicate”

by Jeff Sovern Blankenstein's essay appears in the National Review. Bureau-watchers may recall that Blankenstein served as an associate director at the Bureau during the Trump administration but left after a rebellion over blog posts he had written a decade earlier questioning whether use of the n-word is racist, among other things. Here's the opening […]