Discussion paper

DP5899 The Scope of Punishment: An Economic Theory of Harm-Based vs. Act-Based Sanctions

The harm caused by many acts is not certain but probabilistic. Current public enforcement of the law combines harm-based sanctions (usually in criminal law) with act-based sanctions (very common in administrative law and regulation). We propose an economic theory of the choice between harm-based and act-based sanctions in public enforcement. The efficiency of act-based versus harm-based sanctions is analyzed and a typology of the determinants is drawn up. In the simple model with risk neutral offenders, both legal policies have the same deterrent level, but act-based sanctions end up punishing more people and the sanctions are lower. However when the assessment of the probability of harm diverges across individuals, the choice between harm-based or act-based sanctions depends on whether it is the enforcer or the average individual who is better informed. Legal policy implications are discussed.

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Citation

Garoupa, N and M Obidzinski (2006), ‘DP5899 The Scope of Punishment: An Economic Theory of Harm-Based vs. Act-Based Sanctions‘, CEPR Discussion Paper No. 5899. CEPR Press, Paris & London. https://cepr.org/publications/dp5899