This Article contends that the government should consider – rather than ignore – distributional consequences both in the design of legal rules and during legal transitions. This does not mean that the distributional effect of every legal rule should be measured and taken into account in the rule’s design. But if the likely distributional effects are unintended, large, and objectionable, if the efficiency of the legal rule is doubtful, if the compensating tax-and-transfer adjustment is not forthcoming (or has not occurred), policymakers should take distribution into account. One way of doing so is to choose among several alternative legal rules of questionable efficiency the one with better distributional consequences. Another is to slow the...
A widely accepted result, associated with Louis Kaplow and Steve Shavell, is that it is more costly ...
article examines the relative effectiveness of the redistributive efforts of state and local governm...
Before promulgating a major environmental, health, or safety regulation, U.S. government agencies ar...
This Article contends that the government should consider – rather than ignore – distributional cons...
Rules which redistribute wealth make some people better off at the expense of other people; they imp...
The debate over whether legal rules should be used to redistribute resources in society or whether r...
What should be done about rising income and wealth inequality? Should the design and adoption of leg...
In addition to funding government and redistributing income, a redistributive tax-and-transfer syste...
From the beginning of the law and economics movement, normative legal economists have focused almost...
This article develops two points. First, insurance against the risk of legal change is largely unava...
A central question in law and economics is whether non-tax legal rules should be designed solely to ...
Should legal rules be used to redistribute income? Or should income taxation be the exclusive means ...
This article explores how to build political support for law reform designed to achieve economic red...
It is common for legal theorists and policy analysts to think and communicate mainly in maximizing t...
Tax policy and scholarship generally assume that income has declining marginal utility (that is, tha...
A widely accepted result, associated with Louis Kaplow and Steve Shavell, is that it is more costly ...
article examines the relative effectiveness of the redistributive efforts of state and local governm...
Before promulgating a major environmental, health, or safety regulation, U.S. government agencies ar...
This Article contends that the government should consider – rather than ignore – distributional cons...
Rules which redistribute wealth make some people better off at the expense of other people; they imp...
The debate over whether legal rules should be used to redistribute resources in society or whether r...
What should be done about rising income and wealth inequality? Should the design and adoption of leg...
In addition to funding government and redistributing income, a redistributive tax-and-transfer syste...
From the beginning of the law and economics movement, normative legal economists have focused almost...
This article develops two points. First, insurance against the risk of legal change is largely unava...
A central question in law and economics is whether non-tax legal rules should be designed solely to ...
Should legal rules be used to redistribute income? Or should income taxation be the exclusive means ...
This article explores how to build political support for law reform designed to achieve economic red...
It is common for legal theorists and policy analysts to think and communicate mainly in maximizing t...
Tax policy and scholarship generally assume that income has declining marginal utility (that is, tha...
A widely accepted result, associated with Louis Kaplow and Steve Shavell, is that it is more costly ...
article examines the relative effectiveness of the redistributive efforts of state and local governm...
Before promulgating a major environmental, health, or safety regulation, U.S. government agencies ar...