
Interest in International Arbitration
NCS C
Matthew Secomb(Author)
Oxford University Press
Published on 13. February 2019
Book
Hardback
320 pages
978-0-19-877951-3 (ISBN)
Description
Interest plays a vital and increasing role in international arbitration proceedings, with almost every case having an element of interest involved. However, until now, the topic has received very little attention, meaning that arbitrators have had very little concrete foundation on which to judge decisions on interest awards. This book is the first authoritative guidance to address this, providing a uniform approach to the awarding of interest in international arbitration.
Interest in International Arbitration aligns arbitrators' decisions with standard commercial practice, offering a practical and logical approach to how interest should be awarded. It sets out traditional approaches that arbitrators have followed in the past, such as using conflict of law to apply a statutory rate from a given law, or awarding instead a subjectively 'reasonable' rate, and examines how these inconsistent approaches have resulted in a variety of awards and decisions. The author uses this analysis as a basis for a uniform approach to the issue: granting compound interest at appropriate rates unless constrained by truly mandatory law. The author sets out the calculation method, explores the benefits and limitations, and presents a thorough argument for the movement toward a uniform approach to interest awards.
Interest in International Arbitration aligns arbitrators' decisions with standard commercial practice, offering a practical and logical approach to how interest should be awarded. It sets out traditional approaches that arbitrators have followed in the past, such as using conflict of law to apply a statutory rate from a given law, or awarding instead a subjectively 'reasonable' rate, and examines how these inconsistent approaches have resulted in a variety of awards and decisions. The author uses this analysis as a basis for a uniform approach to the issue: granting compound interest at appropriate rates unless constrained by truly mandatory law. The author sets out the calculation method, explores the benefits and limitations, and presents a thorough argument for the movement toward a uniform approach to interest awards.
Reviews / Votes
Dr Secomb's book represents a comprehensive, up-to-date and critical monograph on the subject of interest. It is timely because there is growing appreciation that the economic and quantitative aspects of international disputes deserve fuller and better attention from parties and their counsel, and arbitrators. As such, this study will be of great assistance to arbitration practitioners, scholars and students in this under-examined corner of international arbitration. * James Freeman, ASA Bulletin *More details
Series
Language
English
Place of publication
Oxford
United Kingdom
Target group
Professional and scholarly
Dimensions
Height: 250 mm
Width: 175 mm
Thickness: 22 mm
Weight
734 gr
ISBN-13
978-0-19-877951-3 (9780198779513)
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Schweitzer Classification
Other editions
Additional editions

Matthew Secomb
Interest in International Arbitration
E-Book
02/2019
OUP eBook
€107.99
Available for download

Matthew Secomb
Interest in International Arbitration
E-Book
02/2019
OUP eBook
€118.99
Available for download
Person
Dr. Matthew Secomb is a partner in White & Case's International Arbitration Group in Singapore. He is also Co-Head of the Asia-Pacific International Arbitration practice. He has acted as counsel in over forty international arbitrations under various rules (ICC, SCC, UNCITRAL, LCIA, ICSID etc). He also acts regularly as arbitrator. Dr. Secomb is an Associate Adjunct Professor in Energy Arbitration at the National University of Singapore and lectures in International Arbitration at Queen's University, Ontario. He is well-published, having authored numerous articles and five book chapters on arbitration and related topics.
Content
I: Introduction
II: Background
III: The rate of interest
IV: Calculation method
V: Period
VI: Conclusion
II: Background
III: The rate of interest
IV: Calculation method
V: Period
VI: Conclusion