Abstract
In recent years, tort victims in the U.S. have been finding it increasingly difficult to
secure compensation through the legal system. This decline of compensation is the
result of a decades-long campaign by corporate defendants to reshape the litigation
landscape in their own favor. The most recent volley in this ongoing battle is an unprecedented, forceful attack against compensation launched by the Trump Administration. Regrettably, the inaccessibility of compensation often spells tragedy for
tort victims. To justify these attacks, supporters of the anticompensation campaign
utilize the economic theory of tort law to formulate forceful arguments against compensation as a general legal principle.
This Article demonstrates that the prevailing economic argument, and the legal order that follows therefrom, is based on a fundamental oversight. In particular, current economic theory fails to consider the possibility of investments by victims to
shift harm to others. This Article is the first to examine the possibility of harmshifting in the context of tort doctrine.
This additional consideration proves to be crucial for the analysis of compensation.
Existing economic theory argues that compensation is “inefficient” as it annuls victims' incentive to invest in self-protection. This argument is reversed once we consider the possibility of harm-shifting. When investing to protect themselves, tort
victims can pass harms on to others. Such investments are wasteful as they are designed only to redistribute harms, not to eliminate them. Therefore, compensation
can actually prove beneficial precisely because it annuls victims' incentive to invest
in self-protection.
Once harm-shifting investments are considered, the economic argument against
compensation is overturned. The case, therefore, for compensation is stronger than
economic theory currently leads us to believe, and action must be taken to reverse
the trending decline of compensation.
Original language | English |
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Article number | 5 |
Pages (from-to) | 573-608 |
Number of pages | 36 |
Journal | Alabama Law Review |
Volume | 70 |
Issue number | 2 |
State | Published - 2018 |