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Torts better than regulations

Many moons ago I directed a conference on government regulation, out of which the book edited by me and the late M. Bruce Johnson, “Rights and Regulation,” was created.

In this book some of those who supported government regulation — and most mainstream contributors did so — maintained that being opposed to government regulations is like being opposed to laws. And since laws are necessary for a just society, the inference was drawn that so are government regulations.

The logic is not impeccable but there is some plausibility to the argument until one considers just how different laws and government regulations really are.

The major difference is that most laws, especially those that comprise the criminal system, are prohibitions, bans on doing certain kind of things like murdering, robbing, assaulting, kidnapping and so forth. These are forbidden because they amount to the violation of people’s rights, intruding upon them and their realm, as when one trespasses on their private property.

Government regulations are something else entirely.

When the government regulates our conduct, it sets certain standards for how the conduct must be carried out. Government regulations do just what they say, regulate, manipulate, regiment, nudge and so forth, mostly conduct that is peaceful, non-invasive, and non-aggressive, although sometimes risky.

If one is a money manager or investment advisor or auto mechanic or TV repairer, government regulations amount to dictating how one should do one’s job. As if government had some kind of superior understanding to which others must be made to conform.

One of the essays in ”Rights and Regulation,” by J. C. Smith then of the University of British Columbia, titled “The Process of Adjudication and Regulation, A Comparison,” made this argument: instead of approaching the concerns that supposedly motivate advocates of government regulation by means of meddling preemptively with the conduct of the regulated, the way to handle it is to have a system of tort and similar law that strongly discourages people from any kind of malpractice.

This avoids one of the central injustices of government regulation, namely prior restraint.

This legal concept is usually associated with slapping restrictions on those engaged in writing for newspapers before it has been shown that their writing will do violence to innocent people and is considered unjust. Similarly, government regulations impose controls on how people conduct themselves before anyone has been harmed, hurt, imposed upon or the like. Government regulations are, in other words, precautionary and escape the restraint of due process of law.

There is nothing in principle wrong with a society of law and order provided no preemptive laws are deployed.

Yes, sometimes they are careless and too ambitious and produce some havoc. But certainly far less so than do agents of governments.

 
 
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