Cover of: Controlling Product Risks when Consumers Are Heterogeneously Overconfident: Producer Liability versus Minimum-Quality-Standard Regulation
Peter Grajzl, Andrzej Baniak

Controlling Product Risks when Consumers Are Heterogeneously Overconfident: Producer Liability versus Minimum-Quality-Standard Regulation

Section: Articles
Volume 172 (2016) / Issue 2, pp. 274-304 (31)
Published 09.07.2018
DOI 10.1628/093245616X14539644608248
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  • 10.1628/093245616X14539644608248
Summary
Contributing to the literature on the consequences of behavioral biases for market outcomes and institutional design, we contrast producer liability and minimum-quality-standard regulation as alternative means of social control of product-related torts when consumers are heterogeneously overconfident about the risk of harm. We elucidate the role of factors shaping the relative desirability of strict liability vis-à-vis minimum-quality-standard regulation from a social welfare standpoint. We also clarify when and why joint use of strict liability and minimum-quality-standard regulation welfare dominates the exclusive use of either mode of social control of torts.