Reviews

The Code of Capital by Katharina Pistor

mezentine's review against another edition

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challenging informative lighthearted medium-paced

3.0

hakkun1's review against another edition

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hopeful informative medium-paced

4.0

breadandmushrooms's review against another edition

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challenging informative slow-paced

2.75

bradley_pough's review against another edition

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2.0

This was a slog. A paradigmatic example of why academics should not write for lay audiences.

The author's basic argument is strong. "Capital" isnt simply an economic asset, but an asset that the law codes into something the market recognizes. By coding valuable assets using the modules of private law-- property, contract, corporate law, bankruptcy, and patent--owners imbue their assets with properities like durability (protections from creditors over time) and convertibility (assurances that an asset can be converted into state money). This coding process, she argues, isnt done by state actors, although it often has the state's eventual support. Instead, capital's legal coding is done by private lawyers working for big law firms who push the limits of private law for their well heeled clients. This, as was the case with some of the toxic derivatives at the center of the financial crisis, often occurs in the state's shadow and it routinely takes quite awhile for state actors--like courts, agencies, or legislators--to weigh in on whether these assets actually deserve the legal protections that the attorneys coded for them.

Despite the force of Pistor's argument, this was a book only a lawyer could love (and maybe only a law professor). I cant imagine lay readers getting through the 20+ pages on feudal property rights and continuing to read on. If you find yourself reading law/or econ journals for fun, this one might be for you. But as a book that she sells as being accessible to a general audience, it felt an awful lot like a collection of her law review articles stuck together with a bit of connective tissue. Good for a small audience, but not right for prime time.

cinnakuri's review against another edition

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this book gets too technical when i feel like it could have been explained in much simpler terms. not sure if i'll return to this.

thomnorman's review against another edition

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challenging informative slow-paced

4.0

indyreadrosa's review against another edition

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5.0

Up pretty high on my list of fav. books of the year. You get Enclosure Laws, Entailments, and Lehman Brothers with a little BitCoin thrown in for good measure. Great introduction into thinking about how The Law makes Capital and Capital influences the Law.

inquiry_from_an_anti_library's review against another edition

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adventurous hopeful informative inspiring reflective fast-paced

5.0

Overview:
Capital is the combination of assets and laws.  Assets can be transformed into capital by the power of the law.  Capital is coded in law, and depends on the legal framework.  Legal modules can give a comparative advantage to some asset holders over others.  What these modules do is determine the assets priority, durability, universality, and convertibility.  Priority ranks competing claims.  Durability adjusts the claims through time, while universality adjusts claims through space.  Convertibility allows the conversion of private credit claims into state money on demand.  Changing these attributes means changing how wealth is distributed, changing who benefits.  

Control over the legal code is power that determines how resources are allocated.  Determining wealth based on how assets are legally coded.  For those who have wealth, when that wealth is threatened, the laws can be changed to give them an advantage.  To protect the interests and benefits of some groups over others.  Assets are not equal, for those with superior legal coding have more rights.  Although under the guise of legal equality, some assets are “more equal” than others.  The defense for this, is that all of this is legal.   
 
Capital:
Capital is not just money.  More than the exchange of goods in a market economy.  Capitalism is a market economy in which some assets get privileged over others.  Guilds were dismantled in favor of competitive markets, but the new businesses have resorted to guild-style practices. 

Capital is made from an asset and the legal code.  An asset is anything that can potentially provide an income in the future.  The law turns the assets into capital which has a tendency to create wealth for its holder(s).  Capital is the value determined by expected monetary income.  Capital creates and protects wealth.

Capital can come from physical property, intellectual property, even nature.  What can be turned into a patent are things that are novel, useful, and improvements.   Patents are a form of monopoly.  Monopolies create gains for the few, while costing the rest.  What they try to do is balance everyone’s costs and benefits. 

A clean title to land means having no competing legal claims.  In that way, a buyer knows that the property is enforceable.  Liquidity of an assets depends on its legal coding.  Less legal obstacles means that the assets can more easily be converted into cash. 

Incorporation means to create a new person.  A legal personality.  Prominent features of corporations are entity shielding, loss shifting, and immortality.  Entity shielding distributes pools of assets, to different creditors.  Loss shifting changes who bears the risk of the firm’s negative consequences.  Immortality is made possible, because to end a corporation would require a bankruptcy proceeding, or a voluntary dissolution by shareholders. 
 
Law:
The legal code underlying the code of capital, depends on its enforcement by a state.  Although lawyers use legal modules to empower assets with attributes for their clients, states enforce these laws.  Expansion and fall of capital depends on how the law is written.  There are various legal modules in which capital is coded, such as contract, law, property rights, corporate, and bankruptcy law.  Taking away or adding modules can make or lose wealth. 

Legal coding does not only enable price discovery, but also determines the value of assets, creation of wealth, and distribution of wealth.  The laws define what an asset is, and what can be done with the asset.  When expected returns fall behind wanted returns, asset holders can enforce their legal entitlements. 

Democratically governed societies guarantee equality before the law, but not everyone can make good use of the laws.  Lawyers use modules to turn ordinary assets into capital.  The legal coding protects the assets from ordinary business cycles, providing longevity to wealth, that sets up sustained inequality. 

Firms can go to domestic or foreign laws, thereby choosing which laws apply to them, and seeking those that provide the greatest benefits.  The legal code’s power depends on even a single state’s willingness to enforce it.  If the threat of enforcement is credible, then there will be voluntary compliance without the need for mobilization. 

All contracts are inherently incomplete, because no party can anticipate all contingencies, and the effort would be too costly.  Lawyers can be seen as transaction cost engineers by navigating complex regulations and avoiding unnecessary costs, or they can be seen as rent seekers.

The allocation of property rights determines who is to incur the costs of change, and thereby enable a process of negotiation.  An efficient outcome can be achieved through negotiation process, if there were no transactions costs.  The initial allocation of property rights matters because there are many transaction costs. 
 
A Coordination Game:
Economic success of nations depends on how they utilize law for social ordering.  Law, as a restraint on state power, was claimed as a reason for the rise of the West.  During the 1980s, many nations provided economic and legal reforms which prioritized markets over government in allocating economic resources.  Clear property rights and credible enforcement were meant to allocate the scarce resources to their more efficient owner, benefiting all. 

But it was state’s willingness to enforce the private coding of assets in law that enables the legal privileged of priority, durability, convertibility, and universality.  Capital is dependent on state power, and legally privileges some assets which provides a comparative advantage in accumulating wealth to their holders over others. 

Contracts and negotiations can happen even them being enforceable in a court of law.  There is no need for formal law enforcement when everyone knows who has better rights.  As long as everyone adheres to established norms, there is no need for a complex legal system, and enforcement powers.  But trade and commerce go beyond established norms, requiring social ordering for dealing with strangers.  Property rights are a solution of a coordination game. 

With the scale of social relations, people can now negotiate on large stakes without even meeting people.  This was enabled by coercive enforcement that makes people commit to their arrangements.  Law has enabled decentralized, private enforcement that enables collective expectations while limiting deviant behavior. 

The erosion of the legitimacy of states is a structural bias within the legal code of capital, that undermines the very thing that capital depends upon.  Courts discover the meaning of property rights by observing actual practices, rather than by their preconception.  Businesses are insisting that disputes are settles out of court, which in irony makes them more vulnerable.  They both depend on the authority of state law, but also avoid courts.  

Law evolves based on every case, with amendments in response to changing norms or political preferences.  Different societies can have different legal needs, and therefore different laws.  Static laws fail to reflect social changes, nor do they respond to the changes. 
 
Caveats?
The book references that law gave rise to capitalism, but acknowledges how law has been used historically.  That means that law has been intertwined with power before.  The power of law has been used and misused by various production methods, not just capitalism.

There is an acknowledgement that the meaning of capital is ambiguous.  There are many ambiguous terms found in the book, but when they are attached to capitalism, they obtain a negative attribute.  Devaluing those who appreciate capitalism, for its positive attributes.  Mostly the negative views about capitalism are brought up, rather than considering the benefits of capitalism, and how the negative consequences of capitalism can be error corrected.

An example of an ambiguous term is free trade and free markets.  The author takes that to mean lack of laws, and there are economists who would agree with that.  But the term meant no monopolies, as in everyone can participate in exchange no matter where they are from or the products they offer.  Market exchange is still regulated in free trade, just cannot restrict who buys or sells.  

george_odera's review against another edition

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5.0

Not many books are as compellingly argued as Pistor's Code of Capital. The book's thesis is simple:capital is coded in law, and law is the very cloth from which capital is cut. Pistor argues that accumulating wealth over long stretches of time requires additional fortification backed by the coercive powers of the State.
In a unique blend of history, legal theory, and economics, Pistor demonstrates how capital principally exhibits four key attributes: Priority, Durability, Universality, and Durability. Capital exhibits these attributes in the legal modules of corporations, trusts, convertible debt, intellectual property, and investment treaties and conflict of laws rules. Modern laws of capital are not legislated in parliament with the input of democratic processes, but in corporate law firms and financial institutions, who are the masters of the code. The law's inherent incompleteness, indeterminacy, and malleability is ammunition to these masters, enabling them to fashion it as they deem convenient.

A key theme in Pistor's book is the need to rethink inequality. Whilst inequality is presently viewed through the lenses class identity, focus ought to be shifted to the question of who has access to and control over legal code. By virtue of being backed by coercive powers of the State, legal codes are subsidies, and the feudal calculus is present in evert exemption and special treatment that capital and its holders enjoy.

beataf's review against another edition

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informative slow-paced

4.0

The audiobook is awful and took me a full year to listen through. But this book presents a really illuminating thread of the structure of economic power in our society - that what we call modernization is a repackaging of power via law to serve capital, and the triumph of incremental increases to protecting capital that have left those outside these power structures increasingly without. I don't think her solutions section was too helpful in terms of presenting some impossible, theoretical, radical alternatives to current society. But the historical perspective and thread that A. this has been building for several centuries, and B. it's qualitatively worse and more captured now than  it has been for a while, and the societal dangerous in that, are helpful.