|
Franklin, Replacing the Negligence Lottery
|
Page | 13/18 | Date | 18.10.2016 | Size | 285.96 Kb. | | #1386 |
| Stewart. Crisis in Tort Law? The Institutional Perspective. Medical malpractice and products liability are the most criticized areas. Welfarist Critiques Critiques of the Incentive theory Depends on information and knowledge, often lacking, particularly among ordinary folks. Underdeterrence and overdeterrence. Causation problems with environmental and health harms. Liability insurance mitigates incentive effects. Critiques of the Compensation (risk-spreading) theory Very uneven coverage of victims. Undercompensation and overcompensation. Passing costs along is inequitable and regressive. Compensation based on lost earnings disproportionately favors the rich. Third-party liability insurance far more costly than first-party or government insurance. Litigation-cost system means undercompensation of badly injured and overcompensation of lightly injured, often due to settlement. Attorney fees and litigation costs. Justice-Based Perspectives Notwithstanding the problems, it accomplishes corrective justice. ALTERNATIVES TO TORT Workers’ Compensation Adopted widely by statute in early 20th century. Abolished tort liability for on-the-job injuries. Abolished fellow-servant rule. Replaced costly litigation with more efficient administrative procedure. Compensation Guaranteed. Usually less than 100% of economic costs. No noneconomic costs. Exclusive remedy Causation No-fault system. Seems to induce better care on the part of employers. Employee’s negligence is irrelevant. Worker must only establish where injury occurred. Problems with injuries that occur over time and cannot be pinpointed, like carpal tunnel syndrome. Impact on wages Wages go down as benefits go up, almost 1:1. In effect, compulsory insurance. No-Fault Automobile Insurance Statutory Some schemes have failed state constitutional challenges. Upheld in MA in Pinnick v. Cleary (1971). Mostly through first-party insurance. Compensation Virtually all accident victims are covered. Unlike tort system, benefits not determined once and for all and paid in one lump sum. Actual, not scheduled, damages. Closer to full loss compensation than workers’ compensation. Great reduction in administrative costs Some evidence of increased accidents, perhaps because of reduced incentive to take care. Exclusivity? Some states preserve tort remedies for fault-based, particularly for grave injuries. “Add-on” states do not limit tort recovery at all. Based on third-party insurance. Some adoption for medical and hospital malpractice. No adoption for products liability. Problems Defining compensable events. Causation. New Zealand Accident Compensation Act of 1972. Comprehensive insurance scheme that replaced virtually all claims for personal injury or death due to accidents (but not illnesses). Five guiding principles Community responsibility Comprehensive entitlement Complete rehabilitation Administrative efficiency Table of Alternatives I = Incentives C = Compensation
System
|
Functions
|
% of Compensation
|
% of Transaction Costs
|
Tort
• Negligence
• Strict Liability
|
I & C
|
8%
|
50%+
|
Workers’ Compensation—
Simplified No-Fault Liability
|
I & C
|
6%
|
30%
(great variety from state to state, based on degree of employer fighting claims)
|
Regulation (prophylactic)
|
I
|
|
|
Government Insurance (Medicare, Medicaid, SS, Disability, UI)
|
C
|
54%
|
<5%
|
Private First-Party Insurance
|
C
|
32%
|
15%
|
Contract (theoretical option)
|
I & C
|
|
| Some reform options Strict liability on workers’ compensation model for hospitals for iatrogenic injuries. Compulsory first-party no-fault auto insurance. MEDICAL MALPRACTICE—IATROGENIC INJURIES Bases for recovery for iatrogenic injuries Tort Negligence Individual provider Enterprise Strict liability Administrative strict liability (WC model) Contract
Share with your friends: |
The database is protected by copyright ©ininet.org 2024
send message
|
|