Monday, October 23, 2017

Limiting Consumer Choice, Expanding Costly Litigation: An Analysis of the CFPB Arbitration Rule

US Treasury Dept
Limiting Consumer Choice, Expanding Costly Litigation: An Analysis of the CFPB Arbitration Rule
Oct 23 2017
https://www.treasury.gov/press-center/press-releases/Pages/sm0186.aspx

WASHINGTON – The U.S. Treasury Department today released a report that examines the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau’s (CFPB) arbitration rule. The Treasury report delves into the analysis CFPB used to prohibit mandatory arbitration clauses.  It outlines important limitations to the data behind CFPB’s rule and explains that CFPB did not appropriately consider whether prohibiting arbitration clauses would advance consumer protection or serve the public interest.

The Treasury report found that:
  • The CFPB’s rule will impose extraordinary costs—generating more than 3,000 additional class action lawsuits over the next five years, imposing more than $500 million in additional legal defense fees, and transferring $330 million to plaintiffs’ lawyers;
  • The CFPB’s data show that the vast majority of class action lawsuits deliver no relief to the class—and that consumers very rarely claim relief available to them;
  • The CFPB did not show that its rule will achieve a necessary increase compliance with the federal consumer financial laws, despite the rule’s high costs; and
The CFPB failed to consider less onerous alternatives to its ban on mandatory arbitration clauses across market sectors.


---
Nearly a century ago, Congress made private agreements to resolve disputes through arbitration “valid,irrevocable, and enforceable” underthe Federal Arbitration Act.

This longstanding federal policy in favor of private dispute resolution serves
the twin purposes of economic efficiency and freedom of contract. In the Dodd-
Frank Act, Congress authorized the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau to limit or ban the use of arbitration agreements in consumer financial contracts only if the Bureau concludes that its restrictions are “in the public interest and for the protection of consumers.”
Against this background, in July 2017, the Bureau issued its final rule (the “Rule”) prohibiting consumers and providers of financial products and services from agreeing to resolve future disputes through arbitration rather than class-action litigation.
The Rule follows the Bureau’s study of arbitration,
summarized in a 2015 report to
Congress. The Arbitration Study attempted
an empirical analysis of
both the arbitral awards and
class action settlements that consumers obtained for a variety of claims.
But the data the Bureau
considered
were
limited in ways that raise
serious questions about its conclusions
and undermine
the foundation of the Rule its
elf
. More fundamentally, the Bureau failed to
meaningfully
evaluate
whether
prohibiting mandatory
arbitration clauses in consumer financial contracts would serve
either consumer protection
or
the public interest
—its two statutory mandates. Neither the St
udy
nor
the Rule
makes
that
requisite
showing. Instead,
on closer inspection,
the Study and the Rule
demonstrate that:
The Rule will impose extraordinary costs—based on the Bureau’s own incomplete
estimates
.
The
Bureau
projects that
the
Rule
will
generate more than 3
,000
additional
class action lawsuits
over the next five years
. Meanwhile,
affected businesses
will spend more than $500
million
in additional legal defense fees, $330 million in payments to plaintiffs’ lawyers,
and $1.7
billion in additional settlements
.
Remarkably,
the Bureau’s
estimates do not account for
expected
increases in state court litigation.
Affected businesses are unlikely to simply absorb
these new financial burdens.
T
he Office of the Comptroller of the Currency recently reported
that
the
Bureau’s own data show that the Rule’s costs will
very
likely be passed
through
to
consumers in the form of higher borrowing costs
for credit card users, among other burdens
.
The vast m
ajority of consumer class actions deliver zero relief to the putative members of
the class.
According to the Bureau’s own data, only 13% of consumer class action lawsuits
filed
result in class
-wide recovery—
meaning tha
t in 87% of cases, either no plaintiffs or only
named plaint
iffs receive relief of any kind.
The Bureau projects that, out
of the 3,000
additional class actions the Rule will generate, four
in five
cases
will
yield
no
recovery for the
putative class of con
sumers.
In the fraction of class actions that generate class
-wide
relief, few affected consumers
demonstrate interest in recovery.
On average, only
4% of plaintiffs entitled
to claim
class
settlement funds actually do so. This suggests that consumers value class action litigation far
less than the Bureau believes they should.
This is not surprising given that plaintiffs who do
claim funds from class action settlements receive, on average, $32.35 per person.
2
The
Rule will effect a large wealth trans
fer to plaintiffs’ attorneys
.
O
n average, plaintiff
-
side
attorneys’ fees account for approximately 31% of the
payments
that
plaintiffs receive from
class action settlements
—and in many types of cases, much more. In an average case,
plaintiffs’ attorneys
collect
more than $1 million; actual plaintiffs receive $32 each.
The
Bureau’s data indicate that the Rule will transfer an additional $330 million over five years
from affected businesses to the plaintiffs’ bar.
The Bureau failed reasonably to consider whether improved disclosures regarding
arbitration would serve consumer interests
better
than its regulatory ban.
The Bureau’s own
data show that the
financial
marketplace offers choices to consumers
regarding arbitration
; the
vast majority of contracts in the major
market segments
do not contain
mandatory arbitration
clauses.
If the Bureau is concerned that consumers are unaware of arbitration clauses, more
prominent disclosure of such clauses would be a lower cost, choice
-preserving
means to
advance consumer protection
.
The Bureau did not adequately
assess the share of class actions that are without merit.
Courts and commentators have long recognized that defendants settle even
meritless lawsuits.
As Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg has explained, the class mechanism
“places pressure on the
defendant to settle even unmeritorious claims.”
1
The Bureau
overlooked
the force of this
argument
and failed to assess the costs of meritless litigation that the Rul
e will generate
.
The Bureau offered
no foundation for its assumption that the Rule will
improve
compliance
with federal consumer financial laws.
The Bureau “
assumes
that the current level of
compliance in consumer finance markets is generally sub
-optimal”
2
and insists that
the
Rule
will protect consumers by remedying that assumed compliance gap.
But
after years of study,
the Bureau has identified no evidence indicat
ing that firms that do not use arbitration clauses
treat their customers better or have higher levels of compliance with the law. As a result, the
Bureau cannot credibly claim that the
Rule would yield
more efficient levels of
compliance.
In view of these defects, it is clear that
the Rule does not satisfy
the statutor
y prerequisites
for banning
the use of arbitration agreements
under the Dodd-
Frank Act
. The Bureau has not made
a reasoned showing that increased consumer class action litigation will
result in a net
benefit
to
consumers or to
the public as a whole. B
ased on the Bureau’s own data, it is far more likely that
the Rule will generate massive economic costs
—borne by businesses and consumers alike
—that
dwarf the
speculative benefits of
the Bu
reau’s theorized increase in
compliance
.

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