This article identifies the conditions under which potentially insolvent injurers over-invest in precaution. We show that this may happen only with respect to precautionary measures that reduce the probability of the accident. No such result occurs if precaution only reduces the magnitude of the harm. Contrary to the literature, we find that over-precaution may also occur when precaution is non-monetary. The reason being is that over-precaution can not only be due to the implicit precaution-subsidy effect (the fact that care-taking reduces the injurer’s exposure to liability when precaution is monetary) but also to a substitution effect between precaution that reduces the probability of accidents and precaution that reduces the magnitude of...
We extend the economic analysis of negligence and intervening causation to “two-sided causation” sce...
Advance Access publication September 5, 2009In legal systems all over the world, injurers are held l...
An injurer avoids liability in negligence when any one of the ingredients of negligence is absent. A...
Insolvency is usually blamed for inducing injurers to take too little precaution. However, it has al...
This study shows that the effects of judgment proofness on precaution depend on whether the injurer ...
In this paper we analyse two ways in which liability can be reduced: caps (the judgment proof proble...
In this paper we revise the results about the efficiency of (strict) unlimited, then limited liabili...
This study shows that the effects of judgment proofness on precaution depend on whether the injurer ...
This paper clarifies the relationship between an injurer\u27s wealth level and his care choice by hi...
Potential defendants faced with the prospect of tort or tort-like damage actions can reduce their li...
Under prevailing tort law, an injurer who must choose between Course of Action A, which creates a ri...
The economic analysis of liability rules sponsors strict liability in the case that only injurers ca...
Under prevailing tort law, an injurer who is required to choose between Course of Action A, which cr...
First order precaution directly affects the probability of an accident, such as judging the speed o...
”First order precaution ” directly affects the probability of an accident, such as judging the speed...
We extend the economic analysis of negligence and intervening causation to “two-sided causation” sce...
Advance Access publication September 5, 2009In legal systems all over the world, injurers are held l...
An injurer avoids liability in negligence when any one of the ingredients of negligence is absent. A...
Insolvency is usually blamed for inducing injurers to take too little precaution. However, it has al...
This study shows that the effects of judgment proofness on precaution depend on whether the injurer ...
In this paper we analyse two ways in which liability can be reduced: caps (the judgment proof proble...
In this paper we revise the results about the efficiency of (strict) unlimited, then limited liabili...
This study shows that the effects of judgment proofness on precaution depend on whether the injurer ...
This paper clarifies the relationship between an injurer\u27s wealth level and his care choice by hi...
Potential defendants faced with the prospect of tort or tort-like damage actions can reduce their li...
Under prevailing tort law, an injurer who must choose between Course of Action A, which creates a ri...
The economic analysis of liability rules sponsors strict liability in the case that only injurers ca...
Under prevailing tort law, an injurer who is required to choose between Course of Action A, which cr...
First order precaution directly affects the probability of an accident, such as judging the speed o...
”First order precaution ” directly affects the probability of an accident, such as judging the speed...
We extend the economic analysis of negligence and intervening causation to “two-sided causation” sce...
Advance Access publication September 5, 2009In legal systems all over the world, injurers are held l...
An injurer avoids liability in negligence when any one of the ingredients of negligence is absent. A...