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Preventable Food Borne Illness With Dose-Response Damages: Optimal Sharing Of Prevention Between Consumers And Processors And The Effect Of Product Liability

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Author Info
Roe, Brian
Abstract

As public concern for food safety burgeons concerned policy makers search for ways to manage the risk inherent to food consumption. Product liability laws may serve as efficient means to induce socially optimal levels of care or may efficiently complement regulation of potentially injurious activities. However, two characteristics common to many food borne illness cases are often not considered in the standard liability economics model that yields these prescriptions: dose-response damage functions and victim damage prevention. This paper explores how dose-response relationships common to the biology and epidemiology of food borne illness may effect the shape of resulting social welfare functions and privately chosen prevention efforts under different liability rules when both processor and consumer affect damages. Dose-response damage functions yield social objectives with multiple local optima that may dictate diametrically opposite policy prescriptions in terms of prevention sharing between consumer and processor. Small changes in the relative efficacy of either party's preventative effort may dictate discrete changes in the socially optimal prescription. Similarly, legal rules that fail to recognize both parties' contribution to damage (e.g., strict processor or consumer liability) or incorrectly define due care standards for processor negligence or contributory negligence may cause private decisions to differ discretely from socially optimal behavior.

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Publisher Info
Paper provided by American Agricultural Economics Association (New Name 2008: Agricultural and Applied Economics Association) in its series 1999 Annual meeting, August 8-11, Nashville, TN with number 21668.

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Date of creation: 1999
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Handle: RePEc:ags:aaea99:21668

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Related research
Keywords: Food borne illness; dose-response; liability; Agricultural and Food Policy; Food Consumption/Nutrition/Food Safety;

References listed on IDEAS
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  1. Miceli, Thomas J & Segerson, Kathleen, 1995. "Defining Efficient Care: The Role of Income Distribution," Journal of Legal Studies, University of Chicago Press, vol. 24(1), pages 189-208, January.
  2. Shogren, Jason F. & Crocker, Thomas D., 1991. "Risk, self-protection, and ex ante economic value," Journal of Environmental Economics and Management, Elsevier, vol. 20(1), pages 1-15, January. [Downloadable!] (restricted)
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  3. Kolstad, Charles D & Ulen, Thomas S & Johnson, Gary V, 1990. "Ex Post Liability for Harm vs. Ex Ante Safety Regulation: Substitutes or Complements?," American Economic Review, American Economic Association, vol. 80(4), pages 888-901, September. [Downloadable!] (restricted)
  4. Steven Shavell, 1984. "A Model of the Optimal Use of Liability and Safety Regulation," RAND Journal of Economics, The RAND Corporation, vol. 15(2), pages 271-280, Summer. [Downloadable!] (restricted)
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