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The Problem of Social Cost

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TLDR
In this paper, it is argued that the suggested courses of action are inappropriate, in that they lead to results which are not necessarily, or even usually, desirable, and therefore, it is recommended to exclude the factory from residential districts (and presumably from other areas in which the emission of smoke would have harmful effects on others).
Abstract
This paper is concerned with those actions of business firms which have harmful effects on others. The standard example is that of a factory the smoke from which has harmful effects on those occupying neighbouring properties. The economic analysis of such a situation has usually proceeded in terms of a divergence between the private and social product of the factory, in which economists have largely followed the treatment of Pigou in The Economics of Welfare. The conclusions to which this kind of analysis seems to have led most economists is that it would be desirable to make the owner of the factory liable for the damage caused to those injured by the smoke, or alternatively, to place a tax on the factory owner varying with the amount of smoke produced and equivalent in money terms to the damage it would cause, or finally, to exclude the factory from residential districts (and presumably from other areas in which the emission of smoke would have harmful effects on others). It is my contention that the suggested courses of action are inappropriate, in that they lead to results which are not necessarily, or even usually, desirable.

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Designing watershed programs to pay farmers for water quality services: Case studies of Munich and New York City

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The Theory of Corporate Finance: A Historical Overview

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The Economics of Corruption and the Corruption of Economics: An Institutionalist Perspective

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Bioprospection: From the Economics of Contracts to Reflexive Governance

TL;DR: In this article, the authors examine the competing proposals for the institutional framing of bioprospection based on the provisions of access and benefit-sharing embodied in the Convention on Biological Diversity, and evaluate the contribution of neo-institutionalist and evolutionist propositions in economic theory.
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Book

The law of torts

Dan B. Dobbs
TL;DR: A single volume introduction to contemporary tort and injury law is presented in this paper, which covers direct and intentional interference with person or property and explores their defenses, and reviews liabilities, damages, and the apportionment of responsibility among parties, and examines the criticism and choices in tort law.