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Dive into the research topics where Rashmi Dyal-Chand is active.

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Featured researches published by Rashmi Dyal-Chand.


Archive | 2007

Exporting the Ownership Society: A Case Study on the Economic Impact of Property Rights

Rashmi Dyal-Chand

Peruvian economist Hernando de Soto is a favorite of the World Bank, numerous world leaders, and politicians in both parties in the United States. His work has been so influential that he has been considered for the Nobel Prize in Economics. Perhaps de Sotos prescription for the ills of developing economies is so influential because it seems so simple. He claims that if poor people in the Third World are given formal title to the assets they currently hold extra-legally, they will be able to generate capital, the surplus value that produces wealth. This article raises some cautionary notes, concluding that things are not so simple. It examines whether poor people who have formal title to their homes in the US, the country de Soto uses as his paramount example, experience the benefits that de Soto attributes to formal ownership. The article finds that the expansion of the ownership society to include the poor does produce many of the benefits de Soto claims. The greatest benefit is increased access to the markets for both residential real estate and mortgage loans. However, much of the wealth accruing from poor peoples participation in these markets goes to market participants other than the poor. For example, many poor homeowners who seek to enhance their wealth by accessing more credit are victimized by predatory lenders who capture the wealth. For many also, the conversion of debt into long-term improvement of welfare is an uncertain and difficult process. For those who epitomize de Sotos hypothesis by using their formal title as an aid in starting small businesses, the path is especially complex and uncertain. In the end, there is no clear connection between property formalization and greater social welfare. This lesson in turn provides useful information about what it is reasonable to expect from rule of law reforms.


Fordham Law Review | 2010

Property in Crisis

Nestor M. Davidson; Rashmi Dyal-Chand


bepress Legal Series | 2006

Human Worth as Collateral

Rashmi Dyal-Chand


Archive | 2015

Regulating Sharing: The Sharing Economy as an Alternative Capitalist System

Rashmi Dyal-Chand


Archive | 2007

Reflection in a Distant Mirror: Why the West Has Misperceived the Grameen Bank's Vision of Microcredit

Rashmi Dyal-Chand


Tulsa Law Review | 2015

Housing as Holdout: Segregation in American Neighborhoods

Rashmi Dyal-Chand


The American University law review | 2014

Pragmatism and Postcolonialism: Protecting Non-Owners in Property Law

Rashmi Dyal-Chand


Hofstra Law Review | 2014

Developing Capabilities, Not Entrepreneurs: A New Theory for Community Economic Development

Rashmi Dyal-Chand; James V. Rowan


Archive | 2013

Sharing the Cathedral

Rashmi Dyal-Chand


Archive | 2010

ARTICLES PROPERTY IN CRISIS

Nestor M. Davidson; Rashmi Dyal-Chand; Peter Byrne; Kristen A. Carpenter; Michael Diamond; Benjamin Ericson; Joshua Grinspoon; Janet Halley; Clare Huntington; Sonia K. Katyal; Adam Levitin; Joseph William Singer

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Kristen A. Carpenter

University of Colorado Boulder

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