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Four Faculty Take Lead in Pandemic Policy Analysis

BC 法律 professors launch ongoing project to track quality of legislation and directives around COVID-19 outbreak.

       

Recognizing the serious economic and financial ramifications of the coronavirus (COVID-19) outbreak, four Boston College 法律 School professors have launched a project to analyze and track the emerging policy responses, including the provisions of H.R. 6201 (the “Families First Coronavirus Responses Act”) passed by the house on March 14.

Given that the responses being developed have limited time for assessment and evaluation—despite their likely dramatic impacts—Professors Hiba哈菲兹, Shu-Yi Oei (上图), Diane Ring, Natalya Shnitser have produced a working paper, “Regulating in Pandemic: Evaluating Economic and Financial Policy Responses to the Coronavirus Crisis,” which will be updated continually to track developments.

“Having spent the past several years working together as part of Boston College 法律 School’s Regulation and Markets Workshop, it made sense to combine our efforts and expertise to try and contribute to effective policy guidance at this critical time,” Diane Ring explained in the Surly Subgroup tax blog 本周.

As stated in the abstract, the Working Paper discusses the ramifications of proposed and legislated policy and other actions and identifies three interrelated but potentially conflicting policy priorities at stake in managing the economic and financial fallout of the COVID-19 crisis: (1) providing social insurance and a social safety net; (2) managing systemic economic and financial risk; and (3) encouraging critical spatial behaviors to help contain transmission.

“The consequences of these three policy considerations and the potential conflicts among them make the outbreak a significant and unique regulatory challenge for policymakers, one for which the consequences of getting it wrong are dire,” the paper states.

The authors bring a wealth of experience to this project.

Shu-Yi Oei
Shu-Yi Oei

Oei teaches and writes in the areas of tax policy and economic regulation. Recent work has focused on innovations in the arena of human capital investments and the taxation and regulation of new industries such as the gig economy. Her research interests also include social insurance and the relationship between tax administration and economic security, privacy and transparency in domestic and international tax enforcement and administration.


Diane Ring
Diane Ring

Ring currently serves as the associate dean of faculty and the Dr. 托马斯·F. Carney Distinguished Scholar at BC 法律. She researches and writes primarily in the field of international taxation, corporate taxation, ethical issues in tax practice. Her recent work addresses issues including information exchange, 税收漏洞, international tax relations, sharing economy and human equity transactions, ethics in international tax.


Natalya Shnitser
Natalya Shnitser

Shnitser is the inaugural David and Pamela Donohue Assistant Professor in business law. Her current research focuses on retirement security in the United States, including the provision of retirement benefits by private and public employers and the regulation of financial intermediaries. Before joining the BC 法律 faculty in 2014, she was an Associate Research Scholar in 法律 and the John R. Raben/Sullivan & Cromwell Executive Director of the Yale 法律 School Center for the Study of Corporate 法律.


Hiba哈菲兹
Hiba哈菲兹

Hafiz teaches and writes in the areas of labor and employment law, antitrust law, administrative law. Her work focuses on legal solutions to labor market concentration and inequality. Previously, she clerked for at the US Court of Appeals for the First Circuit and the US District Court for the District of New Jersey and later practiced law in Washington, DC, representing plaintiffs in antitrust class actions against pharmaceutical companies and employers.