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More than Best Friends: Expansion of Global Law Firms into the Indian Legal Market

Authors

Chris Vena

Abstract

Over the past half century, there has been an accelerating trend towards liberalization in the legal services industry. International free trade agreements have sought to promote open markets for legal services. The United States, United Kingdom, many European countries, Australia, Japan, Russia, China, and Singapore have all opened their legal markets to foreign law firms. India is something of an anomaly in this regard. Although it has one of the world's largest economies and has benefited greatly from liberalization in many industries, India's legal industry remains closed. Competition for foreign capital with other developing nations, particularly China, makes this an issue of paramount importance for India's development. This article will examine India's ban on the entry of foreign law firms into its legal market and assess the implications of this policy on Indian firms' ability to attract foreign direct investment (FDI). It will then examine strategies that foreign firms currently use to participate in the Indian market and their costs and benefits for the development of India's legal and governance infrastructure. Finally, it will examine proposals for liberalizing the market in light of their potential effects on India's ability to attract foreign direct investment.

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