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Political Economy

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    In retrospect, maybe we all should have become bankruptcy lawyers

    By Steve Perry | Published Wed, Jan 28 2009 8:02 am

    Who says there are no vibrant sectors in the U.S. economy? Bloomberg News reports that bankruptcy lawyers are setting new records for hourly fees, with the current champ--Kirkland & Ellis, Clinton special prosecutor Ken Starr's firm--whacking clients for $1,110 an hour:

    Professionals’ fees in bankruptcy cases are growing at four times the rate of inflation, estimated Lynn LoPucki, a professor of bankruptcy law at the University of California, Los Angeles. Total fees paid for lawyers, accountants and other professionals in bankruptcies from 1998 to 2007 doubled, while the consumer price index rose about 25 percent, he said.

    “As the economy gets worse, the bankruptcy lawyers are charging more,” LoPucki said. “It seems that each month one sets a new record for hourly billing rates. $1,110 is, to my knowledge, a record for the debtor’s bankruptcy counsel.”

    Creditors, meanwhile, are doing markedly less well. The average lender recovery at this point is 35 cents on the dollar, down 10 percent from the average recovery rate during previous recessions.

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    Illustration by Hugh Bennewitz

    minnpost.com/steveperry


    Steve Perry is a widely published critic of politics, culture and the arts whose work has appeared in Rolling Stone, Spin, Counterpunch, LA Weekly, the Boston Phoenix, London City Limits and Salon. He began his journalistic career as a music critic for City Pages back in 1984. He was editor of City Pages from 1989-1997 and 2002-2007. In addition, he is also a former contributing editor to Musician magazine and the acclaimed music industry newsletter Rock and Roll Confidential. Perry was most recently editor of the Minnesota Independent.

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