The Equivalence of Strict Liability and Negligence Rule: A Trompe L'oeil Perspective
Author(s) -
Gérard Mondello
Publication year - 2012
Publication title -
ssrn electronic journal
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 1556-5068
DOI - 10.2139/ssrn.2027837
Subject(s) - tort , ambiguity , strict liability , liability , accident (philosophy) , actuarial science , perspective (graphical) , database transaction , law and economics , economics , transaction cost , equivalence (formal languages) , business , computer science , microeconomics , mathematics , artificial intelligence , accounting , philosophy , epistemology , discrete mathematics , programming language
This paper analyzes the difficulties of comparing the respective effectiveness of two among the most important liability regimes in tort law: rule of negligence and strict liability. Starting from the standard Shavellian unilateral accident scheme, I show that matching up liability regime on their capacity to provide the highest level of safety is ineffective. This demonstration lies on two components. The first one gathers some results drawn from literature that introduces uncertainty. The second one takes into consideration the beliefs of agents and their aversion to ambiguity. The model applies uncertainty to the level of maximum damage. This demonstration reinforces the previous result. Hence, both regimes apply on specific tort question and comparing their individual efficiency needs to call for other components as the transaction costs associated to the burden of evidence, the fairness between victims and injurers, etc.
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