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Unfair Terms in Banking and Financial Contracts (Oxford Eu Financial Regulation)

Unfair Terms in Banking and Financial Contracts (Oxford Eu Financial Regulation)

Current price: $422.50
Publication Date: December 21st, 2023
Publisher:
Oxford University Press, USA
ISBN:
9780192866592
Pages:
752
Usually Ships in 1 to 5 Days

Description

This timely new work provides a thorough overview, analysis, and discussion of standard terms control for banking and financial contracts in Europe. Unfair Terms in Banking and Financial Contracts argues that this sector uniquely necessitates unfair terms control, due to the asymmetrical relationship between lay consumers and the financial industry and discusses the role of the judiciary in addressing this imbalance.

The rise of unfair terms control as a remedy for consumers and businesses against financial institutions with superior bargaining power has led to questions about the Directive's threat to existing contracts. Disputes have already arisen across Europe in several areas including foreign currency housing loans, housing loans based on Euribor, and hidden bank fees. These disputes and their outcomes are high stakes for banks and their customers. The stakes of the outcomes of these disputes for the customers as well as for the banks are very high.

The book focuses on the EU Unfair Terms Directive (UTD) but also considers the law of non-EU jurisdictions. Beginning with an overview of the UTD and the extensive case law of the CJEU, the volume brings together leading authorities in the field of financial law to provide analyses of the UTD's application in this sector across 15 EU jurisdictions (Ireland, Germany, France, Italy, Spain, Austria, The Netherlands, Belgium, Sweden, Greece, Poland, Romania, Czech Republic, Hungary, and Estonia). It then goes on to compare the legal situation in three non-EU jurisdictions (United Kingdom, Switzerland, and Norway).

Locating unfair terms control within a broader European struggle to balance the power of market forces and the requirements of social justice, the volume offers a critique of the existing regime and concludes with a proposal for a common legal framework to ensure a level playing field and greater harmonisation across the EU.

About the Author

Matthias Lehman, University of Vienna, Danny Busch, University of Nijmegen Danny Busch is Full Professor (Chair) of Financial Law and founding Director of the Financial Law Centre (FLC), Radboud University, Nijmegen, The Netherlands. He is a Senior Research Fellow at Harris Manchester College, and a Fellow of the Commercial Law Centre, University of Oxford. He is also a Deputy Judge in the Amsterdam Court of Appeal, and a Member of the Appeals Committee of the Financial Services Complaints Tribunal (KiFiD, and ADR-body), The Hague. Matthias Lehmann is a full professor at the Department for European, International and Comparative Law at the University of Vienna. His main interest lies in international and comparative aspects of banking and financial law, on which he has published extensively. He is regularly invited as a guest professor at the Sorbonne University (France), the University of Fribourg (Switzerland) and the Universidad Pablo de Olavide (Spain). Matthias is a member of the Council of the European Law Institute (ELI), of the Academic Board of the European Banking Institute (EBI), and of the International Academy of Comparative Law. He has participated in the European Commission's Expert Group on Conflict of Laws Regarding Securities and Claims.