Recent high-profile lawsuits involving cigarettes, guns, breast
implants, and other products have created new frictions between
litigation and regulation. Increasingly, litigation is being used
as a financial lever to force companies to accept negotiated
regulatory policies --policies that invariably involve less public
input and accountability than those arising from government
regulation. The process not only usurps the traditional
governmental authority for regulation, but also shifts the locus of
establishing tax policy from the legislature to the parties
involved in the litigation. Citizen interests are not explicitly
represented and there is no mechanism to ensure that these outcomes
are in society's best interests. By focusing on case studies
involving the tobacco industry, guns, lead paint, breast implants,
and health maintenance organizations, the contributors to this
volume collectively shed light on the likely consequences of
regulation through litigation for insurance markets and society at
large. They analyze the ramifications of large-scale lawsuits, mass
torts, and class actions for the insurance market, and advocate
increased public scrutiny of attorney reimbursement and a
competitive bidding process for all lawsuits involving government
entities as the plaintiffs.
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