Course:Law3020/2014WT1/Group I/Law As Efficiency

Efficiency
The underlying concept of law and economics is that law develops towards efficiency. Laws are created or die in regards to the efficiency they achieve and therefore we measure are laws with reference to efficiency. This is distinguishable from the Legal Positivist who measured laws with reference towards morality.

Maximization of Social Wealth
The goal of efficiency is the maximization of the social wealth. Law is seen as a tool to do this. For this to work human beings need to be rational and always need to make decision that are objectively in societies and their best interests. However, we are not rational beings and quite often we do not make decisions from a rational perspective. This aspect of the theory ignores social context and human behaviour.

Pareto Superiority
Pareto superiority theory was created by the Italian economist Vilfredo Pareto. It is a theory that one sate of affairs is better than another. This is measured through seeing that at least one person is better off in one state (S1) than another (S2), and that no one in S1 is worse off than someone is S2. There is at least one winner and there are no losers. This can also be achieved if a winner compensates a loser for their loss, but they still win.

Externalities
Externalities are problems that involve third parties outside of a transaction. Costs arise to the third parties when really the cost should be fixed within the relationship of the transaction. The Kaldor-Hicks test measures if a transaction’s overall benefits outweigh the cost to third parties and if they leave profit for those within the transaction.

Disclaimer
The theory of Law and Economics is difficult to apply to the case of Mrs. E v Eve as the prevalent issue in the case is one of morality. This theory, viewed in a strict sense, would critique the judgement, rather than affirm the findings of the Supreme Court. Although this is a controversial topic we will examine the issue of whether parens patriae can authorize a non-therapeutic hysterectomy through the lens of Law and Economics.

The Case
In the early 20th century the eugenics movements promoted the use of sterilization. Canadian provinces, Alberta and British Columbia, enacted Sterilization legislation; society wanted to control the evolution of the human race and there was a belief that “degenerate” individuals would contaminate the population.. By the 1970s this legislation was repealed.

The economic movement of the 20th century can be seen as one of the proponents of regulations like the Sterilization Acts and the eugenics movement. Eugenics was a movement to make the human race more efficient, and many casualties of the Sterilization Acts were people with mental disabilities, like Eve. In a strict interpretation of the theory it is efficient to have people like Eve sterilized. Eve costs society without adding to the maximization of social wealth, and if she were to have a child it would greatly burden her mother and society. To pursue the maximization of social wealth all humans need to be viewed as a rational person who makes decisions based off the value to society. Unfortunately Eve would not fit this narrow definition.

It’s important to note that this theory does not work with all laws. Although efficiency is a good standard to measure many laws and judgements by it is not always appropriate to use it. The court decided that the sterilization could not occur because of morality and an individual’s right to their body. This case illustrates how a law and economic theory does not work for every case. There are areas were morality needs to guide the interpretation of the law. Efficiency doesn’t need to be the end goal, rather things like justice and equity need to be balanced with efficiency in our law making process.