About this blog

Aspects of law and jurisprudence are analyzed and critiqued, generally in terms of the POOP. Occasionally, non sequiturs!

Billable hours and the distribution of costs


Pretty much everyone involved in the legal profession in any meaningful way spends much if not most of his/her time trying to allocate costs. Whether you’re a judge structuring a judgment or consent decree, a litigator structuring a settlement, a transactional attorney structuring a deal, or a legislator or regulator structuring new rules or laws, you’re inevitably left with the fundamental question: “Who is going to bear the cost?” Indeed, any transaction between two or more parties (and even parties acting alone, if you consider externalities) implicates questions of cost distribution.

This is why it is absolutely mind-boggling to me that law firms – ostensibly the veritable pinnacles of rationality and enlightened self-interest – overwhelmingly employ a direct billable-hour model, a model which creates perverse incentives and uncritically distributes costs inefficiently and inequitably.

O, let me count the ways: