Abstract: A common, though by no means universally-accepted doctrine among practitioners of law and economics is that redistribution is no business of the law. This efficiency-only doctrine is not that redistribution is unworthy as a social objective, but that any given benefit to the poor is attainable at a lower cost to the rich through taxation than through the choice of legal rules. The rationale for the efficiency-only doctrine is that redistributive law creates a double distortion: an initial distortion arising from redistribution pre se, through taxation or through law, and an additional distortion all its own. The efficiency-only doctrine is sometimes valid, but is far narrower than its advocates would seem to suggest, and is inappl...
T here are many well-developed theories that explain why governments redistribute income, but very f...
The literature on legal traditions focuses on the comparative macroeconomic effects of legal systems...
A fully adequate inquiry into the foundations of the economic approach to law would address at least...
A common, though by no means universally-accepted doctrine among practitioners of law and economics ...
“Redistribution is accomplished more efficiently through the income tax than through the use of lega...
Should legal rules be used to redistribute income? Or should income taxation be the exclusive means ...
What should be done about rising income and wealth inequality? Should the design and adoption of leg...
The debate over whether legal rules should be used to redistribute resources in society or whether r...
Legal scholars have often argued that a legal system in providing a ‘level playing field ’ for consu...
From the beginning of the law and economics movement, normative legal economists have focused almost...
A widely accepted result, associated with Louis Kaplow and Steve Shavell, is that it is more costly ...
Kaplow and Shavell (1994) show that legal rules should not be made contingent upon the income (wealt...
A B ST R ACT. This Note develops a framework for understanding when policymakers should use equity-...
In this paper, the analysis focuses on some legal issues concerning the redistributive function of t...
Rules which redistribute wealth make some people better off at the expense of other people; they imp...
T here are many well-developed theories that explain why governments redistribute income, but very f...
The literature on legal traditions focuses on the comparative macroeconomic effects of legal systems...
A fully adequate inquiry into the foundations of the economic approach to law would address at least...
A common, though by no means universally-accepted doctrine among practitioners of law and economics ...
“Redistribution is accomplished more efficiently through the income tax than through the use of lega...
Should legal rules be used to redistribute income? Or should income taxation be the exclusive means ...
What should be done about rising income and wealth inequality? Should the design and adoption of leg...
The debate over whether legal rules should be used to redistribute resources in society or whether r...
Legal scholars have often argued that a legal system in providing a ‘level playing field ’ for consu...
From the beginning of the law and economics movement, normative legal economists have focused almost...
A widely accepted result, associated with Louis Kaplow and Steve Shavell, is that it is more costly ...
Kaplow and Shavell (1994) show that legal rules should not be made contingent upon the income (wealt...
A B ST R ACT. This Note develops a framework for understanding when policymakers should use equity-...
In this paper, the analysis focuses on some legal issues concerning the redistributive function of t...
Rules which redistribute wealth make some people better off at the expense of other people; they imp...
T here are many well-developed theories that explain why governments redistribute income, but very f...
The literature on legal traditions focuses on the comparative macroeconomic effects of legal systems...
A fully adequate inquiry into the foundations of the economic approach to law would address at least...