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Chapter Thirty-Three Law and Economics
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Effects of Laws Property right assignments affect
asset, income and wealth distributions; e.g. nationalized vs. privately owned industry.
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Effects of Laws Property right assignments affect
asset, income and wealth distributions; e.g. nationalized vs. privately owned industry. resource allocations; e.g. the tragedy of the commons e.g. patents encourage research.
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Effects of Laws Punishments affect incentives for illegal behavior;
e.g. high speeding fines can reduce the amount of speeding.
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Effects of Laws Punishments affect incentives for illegal behavior;
e.g. high speeding fines can reduce the amount of speeding. asset, income and wealth distributions; e.g. jail time results in lost income.
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Crime and Punishment x is the quantity of an illegal activity produced by an individual. C(x) is the production cost. B(x) is the benefit. Gain is B(x) - C(x). What is the rational choice of x?
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Crime and Punishment First-order condition is
Notice that marginal costs matter more than do total costs.
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Crime and Punishment B(x) C(x), low MC
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Crime and Punishment B(x) C(x), higher, but same MC C(x), low MC
No change to illegal activity level.
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Crime and Punishment B(x) C(x), low MC
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Crime and Punishment B(x) C(x), high MC C(x), low MC
Higher marginal costs deter crime.
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Crime and Punishment Detection of a criminal is uncertain.
e is police effort. (e) is detection probability; (e) = 0 if e = 0 (e) as e .
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Crime and Punishment Given e, the criminal’s problem is
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Crime and Punishment Given e, the criminal’s problem is
First-order condition is
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Crime and Punishment Given e, the criminal’s problem is
First-order condition is Low e low (e) low marg. cost. High e high (e) high marg. cost.
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Crime and Punishment B(x) Higher police effort deters crime.
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Crime and Punishment Higher fines and larger police effort both raise marginal production costs of illegal activity. Which is better for society -- higher fines, or more police effort?
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Crime and Punishment Higher fines and larger police effort both raise marginal production costs of illegal activity. Which is better for society -- higher fines, or more police effort? Police effort consumes resources; higher fines do not. Better to fine heavily.
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Liability Law An injurer, IN, and a victim, V.
x is effort by IN to avoid injuring V. cIN(x) is IN’s cost of effort x; cIN(x) as x . L(x) is V’s loss when IN’s effort is x; L(x) as x .
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Liability Law Society wishes to minimize total cost; i.e.
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Liability Law Society wishes to minimize total cost; i.e.
Social optimality requires I.e. IN’s private marginal cost of effort equals marginal benefit of her extra effort.
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Liability Law Liability rules: no liability rule strict liability rule
negligence rule. Which is best?
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Liability Law No Liability Rule: IN faces only private cost, cIN(x).
Hence chooses effort level No liability results in suboptimal low care level and excessive injury.
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Liability Law Full Liability Rule:
IN faces private cost and V’s costs, cIN(x) + L(x). Hence chooses the socially optimal effort level where
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Liability Law Negligence Rule: IN is liable for V’s loss if and only if care effort level , a legally determined effort level.
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Liability Law Negligence Rule: IN is liable for V’s loss if and only if care effort level , a legally determined effort level. What if the court sets , the socially optimal effort level?
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Liability Law So full liability for IN; hence she chooses
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Liability Law So full liability for IN; hence she chooses
And no liability for IN; hence she chooses
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Liability Law So full liability for IN; hence she chooses
And no liability for IN; hence she chooses I.e. the negligence rule is socially optimal when
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Liability Law Both full liability and negligence rules are socially optimal, but full liability fully insures V always, and the negligence rule fully insures V only if IN’s care effort level
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Liability Law Both full liability and negligence rules are socially optimal, but full liability fully insures V always, and the negligence rule fully insures V only if IN’s care effort level Victims prefer full liability; injurers prefer the negligence rule.
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Bilateral Accidents V and IN can each exert effort to avoid a loss.
cV(xV) and cIN(xIN). Loss is L(xV,xIN). Society wishes to
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Bilateral Accidents Society wishes to
Social optimality requires V’s MC of effort = MB of his effort IN’s MC of effort = MB of her effort. I.e.
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Bilateral Accidents No Liability: Both V and IN face only their private effort costs, not the full social costs of their actions.
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Bilateral Accidents No Liability: Both V and IN face only their private effort costs, not the full social costs of their actions. Hence V and IN both provide too little effort. No liability is socially suboptimal.
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Bilateral Accidents Full Liability: V is fully compensated for all injury costs.
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Bilateral Accidents Full Liability: V is fully compensated for all injury costs. Hence V chooses Full liability is socially suboptimal in bilateral accidents.
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Bilateral Accidents Strict Division of Losses: IN must pay a fixed fraction, f, of loss caused. IN minimizes IN chooses effort satisfying
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Bilateral Accidents IN chooses effort satisfying Optimality requires
Since f < 1, IN chooses less than the optimal effort level;
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Bilateral Accidents IN chooses effort satisfying Optimality requires
Since f < 1, IN chooses less than the optimal effort level; Strict division of losses is a socially suboptimal liability rule.
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Bilateral Accidents Negligence Rule: IN is fully liable for loss only if her effort level , a legally determined effort level. Social optimality requires V and IN to choose effort levels and , where and
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Bilateral Accidents Suppose V chooses
Then IN is fully liable and wishes to I.e. IN chooses
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Bilateral Accidents Now suppose IN chooses Then V wishes to
I.e. V chooses
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Bilateral Accidents Now suppose IN chooses Then V wishes to
I.e. V chooses The Nash equilibrium of the negligence rule game is the socially optimal outcome.
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Bilateral Accidents Strict Liability with Defense of Contributory Negligence Rule: IN is fully liable unless V’s care level is less than a specified level
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Bilateral Accidents IN is fully liable unless V’s care level is less than a specified level If society chooses and V chooses , then IN is fully liable, so her best reply is
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Bilateral Accidents IN is fully liable unless V’s care level is less than a specified level If society chooses and V chooses , then IN is fully liable, so her best reply is If IN chooses , then V’s best reply is
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Bilateral Accidents IN is fully liable unless V’s care level is less than a specified level If society chooses and V chooses , then IN is fully liable, so her best reply is If IN chooses , then V’s best reply is I.e. the rule causes a socially optimal Nash equilibrium.
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Bilateral Accidents Notes:
socially optimal liability rules do not generally fully compensate the victim. socially optimal accident deterrence is distinct from optimal accident compensation.
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Treble Damages & Antitrust Law
The Sherman and Clayton Acts allow an agent damaged by price-fixing to sue and recover treble damages. How does such a penalty affect the behavior of a price-fixing cartel?
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Treble Damages & Antitrust Law
Assume firms collude to form a cartel with a constant marginal production cost, Market demand is
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Treble Damages & Antitrust Law
Assume firms collude to form a cartel with a constant marginal production cost, Market demand is Cartel’s goal is
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Treble Damages & Antitrust Law
Assume firms collude to form a cartel with a constant marginal production cost, Market demand is Cartel’s goal is Solution is
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Treble Damages & Antitrust Law
Suppose fixing price at results in damages to a victim V. V’s probability of winning suit against the cartel is If V wins, the cartel must pay
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Treble Damages & Antitrust Law
Suppose fixing price at results in damages to a victim V. V’s probability of winning suit against the cartel is If V wins, the cartel must pay Cartel’s problem is now
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Treble Damages & Antitrust Law
Cartel’s problem is now Solution is not generally the same as for the original problem So generally cartel behavior is affected by the penalty.
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Treble Damages & Antitrust Law
Special case -- suppose is the cartel’s profit. The cartel’s goal is
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Treble Damages & Antitrust Law
Special case -- suppose is the cartel’s profit. The cartel’s goal is Maximizing after-penalty profit requires maximizing before-penalty profit.
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Treble Damages & Antitrust Law
Special case -- suppose is the cartel’s profit. The cartel’s goal is Maximizing after-penalty profit requires maximizing before-penalty profit. The cartel’s behavior is unaffected by the penalty.
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Treble Damages & Antitrust Law
What if consumers can seek to be damaged?
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Treble Damages & Antitrust Law
What if consumers can seek to be damaged? Suppose consumer utility is quasi-linear; Consumer can win damages So consumer’s goal is
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Treble Damages & Antitrust Law
Consumer’s goal is I.e.
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Treble Damages & Antitrust Law
Consumer’s goal is I.e.
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Treble Damages & Antitrust Law
Consumer’s goal is Since consumer’s action depends upon the effective price, rewrite the cartel’s problem as
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Treble Damages & Antitrust Law
Consumer’s goal is Since consumer’s action depends upon the effective price, rewrite the cartel’s problem as Solution is the same as the original problem;
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Treble Damages & Antitrust Law
Solution is the same as the original problem; is the price paid by buyers. Then
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Treble Damages & Antitrust Law
Solution is the same as the original problem; is the price paid by buyers. Then So
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Treble Damages & Antitrust Law
The cartel’s price , the price set in the absence of damage penalties. But the effective price to both consumers and the cartel is the same as in the no damages case.
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