Article(electronic)January 21, 2009
DIFFERENTIATING BETWEEN FIRST AND REPEAT OFFENSES
In: Contemporary economic policy: a journal of Western Economic Association International, Volume 27, Issue 1, p. 76-85
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Abstract
I present a model where a regulator monitors compliance with a policy by a population of individuals, some of whom repeatedly prefer to violate the policy, while others only occasionally want to experiment. I show that the regulator can use sanctions, contingent on past violations of the policy, to differentiate between the agents and to improve welfare. Such punishment plans arise frequently in practice. As a result, a regulator prefers investing in enforcement rather than use maximal sanctions. (JEL K42, K14, L51)
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