-
As the Government reviews the
system, new proposals are published today that would force
funders to make early payouts to claimants, consolidate
losses, and focus on economically sound
cases
Britain's class action regime risks
becoming a drag on growth, imposing billions in costs while
delivering little for consumers, according to a new paper
published by the Institute of Economic Affairs
today.
The report – Class Act: The case for
reforming Britain's class action regime
by competition lawyer Stephen Dnes –
warns that the UK's opt-out system introduced in 2015 has seen an
explosion of speculative lawsuits. Pending claims are valued at
£134 billion, with around one new class action filed each
week.
Cases often deliver little
compensation to consumers but offer big returns for funders and
lawyers. In Merricks v
Mastercard, at one point a
funder tried to offer just 48p each so that funders and lawyers
could have £179m of the final £200m
settlement.
While strong cases against cartels are
justified, the incentives between the parties - including
claimants, law firms, and funders - don't always align under the
current system, which can lead to perverse outcomes. There has
reportedly been an 'exodus of key lawyers' from
the law firm Pogust Goodhead suing in the Fundao dam case, one of
the biggest class action cases in the UK, after clashes with
third-party funders. Perverse incentives can also lead to weak
and speculative claims proliferating alongside stronger ones, and
cases dragging on for years.
This is carrying a substantial
economic cost by slowing innovation, driving up business costs,
and undermining growth. A recent analysis by the European Centre
for International Political Economy suggests such litigation
could cost the economy as much as £18 billion, including £11
billion in lost market capitalisation for innovative firms. Money
that would otherwise go towards innovation, lower prices, or
returns on investment for shareholders, is instead set aside for
legal costs.
The Government currently has an open
call for evidence to look at potential reforms. Today's report
proposes a package of tangible proposals to focus the regime on
strong, economically justified cases:
These changes would sharply reduce
speculative litigation and ensure class actions deter
anti-competitive behaviour without stifling innovation or
burdening the economy with unnecessary
costs.
Leading competition lawyer and
author of the report Stephen Dnes said:
“Class actions can play a vital role
in detering anti-competitive behaviour and protecting consumers,
but the UK's regime has gone off course. There is a real risk of
friendly fire especially when innovative companies are sued. It
is time for a course correction.”
“The system can be fixed, by fixing
the misaligned incentives built into the system, to restore focus
on genuine harm, speed up justice, and support
growth.”
ENDS
Notes to Editors