A "decoupled " liability system is one in which the award to the plaintiff differs from the payment by the defendant. The optimal system of decoupling makes the defendant's payment as high as possible. Such a policy allows the award to the plaintiff to be lowered, thereby reducing the plaintiff's incentive to sue-and hence litigation costs- without sacrificing the defendant's incentive to exercise care. The optimal award to the plaintiff may be less than or greater than the optimal payment by the defendant. The possibility of an out-of court settlement does not qualitatively affect these results. If the settlement can be monitored, it may be desirable to decouple it as well. 1
This paper studies alternative care situations in which the injurer is liable for harm but the victi...
This paper studies alternative care situations in which the injurer is liable for harm but the victi...
This article shows that it may be socially optimal to grant accident victims less than full compensa...
Professors Polinsky and Che advocate "decoupling" what plaintiffs recover from what defendants pay i...
This article examines optimal legal system design in a model with private suits, evidence signals, c...
In a 1991 paper, Polinsky and Che argue that lowering plaintiffs’ recovery and raising defendants’ d...
Tort law faces a dilemma: how to adhere to a principle of make-whole compensation without entrenchin...
Potential defendants faced with the prospect of tort or tort-like damage actions can reduce their li...
The central allocative decision confronting a judge in a nuisance dispute should not concern the ide...
Our civil liability system affords numerous defenses against every single violation of the law. A su...
This article examines a model of strict liability with costly litigation and presents conditions und...
Economic models of tort law evaluate the efficiency of liability rules in terms of care and activity...
The scope of this paper is to demonstrate that only in case of unilateral accident a party will take...
Economic models of tort law evaluate the efficiency of liability rules in terms of care and activity...
This article derives the optimal award to a winning plaintiff and the optimal penalty on a losing pl...
This paper studies alternative care situations in which the injurer is liable for harm but the victi...
This paper studies alternative care situations in which the injurer is liable for harm but the victi...
This article shows that it may be socially optimal to grant accident victims less than full compensa...
Professors Polinsky and Che advocate "decoupling" what plaintiffs recover from what defendants pay i...
This article examines optimal legal system design in a model with private suits, evidence signals, c...
In a 1991 paper, Polinsky and Che argue that lowering plaintiffs’ recovery and raising defendants’ d...
Tort law faces a dilemma: how to adhere to a principle of make-whole compensation without entrenchin...
Potential defendants faced with the prospect of tort or tort-like damage actions can reduce their li...
The central allocative decision confronting a judge in a nuisance dispute should not concern the ide...
Our civil liability system affords numerous defenses against every single violation of the law. A su...
This article examines a model of strict liability with costly litigation and presents conditions und...
Economic models of tort law evaluate the efficiency of liability rules in terms of care and activity...
The scope of this paper is to demonstrate that only in case of unilateral accident a party will take...
Economic models of tort law evaluate the efficiency of liability rules in terms of care and activity...
This article derives the optimal award to a winning plaintiff and the optimal penalty on a losing pl...
This paper studies alternative care situations in which the injurer is liable for harm but the victi...
This paper studies alternative care situations in which the injurer is liable for harm but the victi...
This article shows that it may be socially optimal to grant accident victims less than full compensa...