Economic Efficiency and Damage Awards in Personal Injury Torts
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George A Schieren
Past discussions about economic efficiency and personal injury torts have focused on the relationship between the optimal amount of care a potential injurer should take for economic efficiency. Typically this discussion has assumed that the economic damages are strictly monetary without any full consideration of how these damages should be measured. This paper constructs a general model which incorporates as an unknown the amount of monetary damages that an injurer should pay in the interest of economic efficiency. The optimal amount of damages need to be known to serve as signal for the amount of care a potential injurer should take. The model shows that the optimal damage award should be at that point where that marginal utility of money paid out by the injurer equals the marginal utility of the money received by the victim under his utility function after the accident and not considering any non-monetary damages.
©2011 Walter de Gruyter GmbH & Co. KG, Berlin/Boston
Articles in the same Issue
- Article
- Estimating Capitalization Rates for the Excess Earnings Method Using Publicly Traded Comparables
- Valuing Internet Ventures
- Economic Efficiency and Damage Awards in Personal Injury Torts
- Evaluating Aalto Multicines, S.A. A Foreign Private Company in a Unique Situation
- Do Court Preferences for Valuation Approaches of Closely Held Companies Vary by Industry?
Articles in the same Issue
- Article
- Estimating Capitalization Rates for the Excess Earnings Method Using Publicly Traded Comparables
- Valuing Internet Ventures
- Economic Efficiency and Damage Awards in Personal Injury Torts
- Evaluating Aalto Multicines, S.A. A Foreign Private Company in a Unique Situation
- Do Court Preferences for Valuation Approaches of Closely Held Companies Vary by Industry?