Personal injury and wrongful death damages calculations: transatlantic dialogue
In: Contemporary studies in economic and financial analysis 91
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In: Contemporary studies in economic and financial analysis 91
In: Practicing Professional Ethics in Economics and Public Policy, S. 223-228
In: Contemporary economic policy: a journal of Western Economic Association International, Band 6, Heft 3, S. 97-107
ISSN: 1465-7287
The tort reform movement in the United States reached its peak during 1986, when 39 states passed legislation to limit court awards. The explosion of litigation and jury awards in the US. frequently was stated as the cause for the liability insurance crisis. This paper explores the origins of the tort reform crisis. It concludes that the crisis was produced by the natural instability of the liability insurance industry and by the impact of technology on specific coverage lines.
In: The American economist: journal of the International Honor Society in Economics, Omicron Delta Epsilon, Band 23, Heft 2, S. 77-77
ISSN: 2328-1235
In: The American economist: journal of the International Honor Society in Economics, Omicron Delta Epsilon, Band 21, Heft 2, S. 87-88
ISSN: 2328-1235
In: The American economist: journal of the International Honor Society in Economics, Omicron Delta Epsilon, Band 19, Heft 2, S. 51-55
ISSN: 2328-1235
In: Contemporary studies in economic and financial analysis Volume 91
The volume focuses on litigation damages, economic and non-economic, including punitive damages; their definitions, calculations, and assignments in the US and EU. The objective is to examine areas of convergence and divergence in the academic and practical treatment of damages issues in the US and EU. Many of the chapters in the volume are drawn from the papers and discussions generated at the Trans-Atlantic Dialogue meetings of the National Association of Forensic Economics that began in Edinburgh, Scotland, in 2004. That meeting focused on the development of the 'Ogden' multipliers for calculating damages mandated for consideration by UK Courts in 1999. The 2005 meetings (Dublin, Ireland) centred on Markov methodologies used in the US for generating work-life tables and their adoption into damages multipliers, punitive damages, and the process of Irish tort reform. In 2006 discussions in Florence, Italy, focused on methods for calculating non-economic damages in the US and EU as well as the process of harmonization of tort law within the EU. Most recently, the 2007 discussions in Barcelona, Spain, dealt with comparisons of scheduled damages systems in the US and the EU
In: Economic Development and Cultural Change, Band 29, Heft 1, S. 141-163
ISSN: 1539-2988
In: The American journal of economics and sociology, Band 39, Heft 3, S. 249-259
ISSN: 1536-7150
Abstract. Brazil's rural to urban migration has been dramatic. In 1940 only 15 percent of the country's population lived in urbanized areas. By 1970 more than 50 percent were so classified. This trend in population concentration continues. Studies of the causes and the consequences of population shifts in Brazil when based upon "choice models" of decision making are inconclusive. The current trend in urban migration reflects the impact of structural changes in Brazil's economy including industrialization, agricultural automation, and the accompanying modifications of programs and policies of Brazil's changing governmental elite. Governmental policies designed to stem the flow of population to the cities will require structural changes in the economy comparable to those which precipitated the migration.