This setting lets you change the way you view articles. You can choose to have articles open in a dialog window, a new tab, or directly in the same window.
Open in Dialog
Open in New Tab
Open in same window
Open in New Tab
Open in same window

Journal of Economic Perspectives: Vol. 5 No. 3 (Summer 1991)
JEP Volume. 5, Issue 3 |
Previous ArticleNext Article
Sign up for Email Alerts Follow us on Twitter
Full-text Article (Complimentary)
View Comments on This Article (0) | Login to post a comment
Previous ArticleNext Article
Expand
Quick Tools:
Print Article Summary Email Link to this Article Export CitationSign up for Email Alerts Follow us on Twitter
Explore:
Economic Theories of Legal Liability
Article Citation
Cooter, Robert D. 1991. "Economic Theories of Legal Liability."
Journal of Economic Perspectives,
5(3): 11-30.
DOI: 10.1257/jep.5.3.11
DOI: 10.1257/jep.5.3.11
Abstract
This essay synthesizes and re-conceptualizes some central results of the economic analysis of liability law and sketches the legal details that drive them. Three different legal mechanisms for creating efficient incentives are examined in turn. The first mechanism uses the legal rule of strict liability to internalize costs. The second mechanism uses a negligence standard to create and enforce efficient standards of behavior. The third mechanism uses law to channel transactions into voluntary exchange. The initial explanation of the three mechanisms makes simplifying assumptions of perfect information, solvency, costless dispute resolution, and risk neutrality, before examining the results of relaxing these assumptions. The rules of the three major bodies of liability law—property, contracts, and torts—will be analyzed as examples within these three mechanisms. Property law concerns appropriation of ownership rights or interference with them; contract law concerns broken promises; tort law concerns accidental or intentional harm to people or property.
Article Full-Text Access
Full-text Article (Complimentary)
Authors
Cooter, Robert D. (U CA, Berkeley)
JEL Classifications
K13: Tort Law and Product Liability
K12: Contract Law
K11: Property Law
G22: Insurance; Insurance Companies
K12: Contract Law
K11: Property Law
G22: Insurance; Insurance Companies
Comments
View Comments on This Article (0) | Login to post a comment

