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Risk Aversion, Liability Rules, and Safety
Authors:Joshua Graff Zivin   Richard E. Just  David Zilberman
Affiliation:aDepartment of Health Policy and Management, Joseph L. Mailman School of Public Health, and International Center for Health Outcomes and Innovation Research, Columbia University, 600 West 168th Street and NBER, NY 10032, USA;bDepartment of Agricultural and Resource Economics, University of Maryland, USA;cDepartment of Agricultural and Resource Economics, University of California, Berkeley, USA
Abstract:This paper investigates the performance of liability rules in two-party stochastic externality problems where negotiations are feasible and side payments are based on the realized level of externalities. Results show that an increase in polluter liability does not necessarily increase safety or efficiency in cases where the polluter is risk neutral. Complete polluter liability is found to yield Pareto optimality. When either party is risk averse, an increase in polluter liability may sometimes reduce safety and efficiency. If the polluter is risk neutral and the victim is risk averse, Pareto optimality is only achieved by assigning full liability on the polluter, i.e. giving the victim complete property rights to a clean environment. If the polluter is risk averse and the victim is risk neutral, no level of polluter liability is optimal. In this case, optimality can only be achieved through a contract on abatement activities, such that the risk-averse polluter receives a guaranteed payment regardless of the stochastic outcome.
Keywords:Coase theorem   Externality   Stochastic pollution
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