Abstract
In the law and economics literature liability is generally regarded as an
instrument which provides potential tortfeasors with incentives for optimal care
taking. The question, however, arises whether liability can still provide those
incentives when risks are unknown. That is the central question that is addressed
in this contribution. One may, furthermore, have to differentiate between risks
that are unknown to the tortfeasor and those are that not known according to the
state of the art. After setting out the economic functions of liability rules and
regulation the effects of missing information for care levels and activity levels is
sketched and attention is paid to the way in which strict liability and negligence
affect the incentives to conduct research concerning unknown risks. We conclude
that an exposure to liability may on the one hand provide potential tortfeasors
with incentives to do further research and hence to innovate; on the other hand,
liability for unknown risks could also limit activity levels of socially desirable
activities. We therefore conclude that it remains inherently difficult to use tort law
as an instrument to provide incentives to generate information concerning un-
known risks. We argue that in the tradeoff between tort liability and safety
regulation there are strong arguments in favour of safety regulation, on the
condition that it is used in a smart mix with liability rules. Finally we equally
investigate problems that arise in case of insurance of liability for unknown risks.
Original language | English |
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Pages (from-to) | 198-228 |
Number of pages | 31 |
Journal | Journal of European Tort Law |
Volume | 7 |
Issue number | 2 |
DOIs | |
Publication status | Published - 2016 |
Research programs
- SAI 2008-06 BACT