确保侵权行为的充分威慑:一个公益实验

T. Eisenberg, C. Engel
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引用次数: 1

摘要

为了探讨损害赔偿规则的威慑作用,我们采用公共物品实验来调整实际民事诉讼中使用的允许处罚规则。实验处理类似于:(1)仅限于个人诉讼的损害赔偿,(2)仅限于集体诉讼中可获得的群体损害赔偿,如集体诉讼,以及(3)允许超出对受害者实际伤害的损害赔偿,如惩罚性损害赔偿。对损害赔偿的处理仅限于对个人的伤害,并不能防止在没有惩罚或惩罚过轻的公共物品实验中常见的合作随着时间的推移而恶化。在集体诉讼损害赔偿处理中,合作是长期稳定的。在损害赔偿处理中,合作接近最优水平,但产生了社会不公正惩罚的担忧。在所有的治疗方法中,追求金钱最大化的代理人都应该完全搭便车,不会对公共利益做出任何贡献。因此,我们的结果不能用激励效应来解释。相反,我们发现社会偏好与制裁的严重程度相互作用,即使实施制裁不是利他的,而是在经济上使制裁当局受益。结果呈现出三种不同的处理方式,即玩家可以选择不为自己保留这些损害,而是在没有任何好处的情况下将其没收。因此,我们可以排除这样一种可能性,即制裁的有益效果取决于参与者知道实施制裁的玩家并非有意中饱私欲。我们开发的方法可用于评估许多损害赔偿规则的社会福利效益,例如反垄断案件中的三倍损害赔偿以及医疗事故案件和惩罚性损害赔偿案件中常见的损害赔偿上限。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Assuring Adequate Deterrence in Tort: A Public Good Experiment
To explore damage rules’ deterrent effect, we use a public good experiment to tailor allowable punishment to rules used in actual civil litigation. The experimental treatments are analogous to: (1) damages limited to harm to an individual litigant, (2) damages limited to harm to a group available in aggregate litigation, such as class actions, and (3) damages allowed beyond actual harm to victims, such as punitive damages. The treatment with damages limited to harm to an individual does not prevent the deterioration in cooperation over time commonly found in public good experiments without punishment or with too low punishment. In the class action damages treatment, cooperation is stable over time. In the damages-beyond-harm treatment, cooperation approaches the optimal level, but concerns of socially unjust punishment arise. In all treatments, a money maximising agent would be expected to completely freeride and make no contribution to the public good. Our results can thus not be explained by an incentive effect. Rather we find that social preferences interact with the severity of sanctions, even if imposing the sanction is not altruistic, but instead financially benefits the sanctioning authority. The results persist in a variation of the three treatments in which the player imposing damages has the option to not retain them for herself but to have them forfeited with no benefit to her. We can therefore rule out that the beneficial effect of sanctions hinges on the participants knowing that the player imposing sanctions cannot intend to enrich herself. The methodology we develop could be used to assess the social welfare benefit of many damages rules, such as treble damages in antitrust cases and caps on damages common in medical malpractice cases and punitive damages cases.
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