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Performance-Based Regulation: Enterprise Responsibility for Reducing Death, Injury, and Disease Caused by Consumer Products. Stephen D. Sugarman University of California, Berkeley. Canada - Deaths each year. Tobacco products 37,000. Alcohol products 8,000.
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Performance-Based Regulation: Enterprise Responsibility for Reducing Death, Injury, and Disease Caused by Consumer Products Stephen D. Sugarman University of California, Berkeley
Annual Canadian Deaths • Total annual deaths 240,000 • from: • Tobacco products 37,000 • Alcohol products 8,000 • Motor Vehicles 3,000 • Junk food/obesity (est.) 8,000 • These four “products” are responsible for approximately 25% of all deaths
U.S. Death Data • Total annual deaths 2,500,000 • from • Tobacco 400,000 • Alcohol 80,000 • Junk food 100,000 • Motor vehicles 40,000 - Again, these four “products” are responsible for about 25% of deaths.
Canada, AU and US Death Data • Population adjusted (to AU #s) • AU US CANADA • Tobacco 19,000 20,000 18,500 • Alcohol 6,000 4,000 4,000 • Junk food 5,000 5,000 4,000 • Motor Veh 1,800 2,100 1,500 - Basically similar results
Framing by Industry • We wash our hands of these matters – they are not our problem
According to industry, it is a: User problem (people smoke, drink and eat too much, drive badly) and User abuse (second-hand smoke, drunk drivers)
Re-Framing • 1. Enterprises need to take responsibility for the negative social consequences – the large scale public health disaster – caused by just these few consumer products. • 2. They profit from the sale of these products; they know these harms will occur; they have moral obligations. • 3. They are well positioned to reduce harm.
My Proposed Strategy: Enterprises are given responsibility for reducing the negative consequences of their products through Performance-based Regulation
Public authorities measure whether target has been achievedIf so, firms are praised
If not, firms must pay for the social costs beyond the target
Performance-based Regulation • What sort of targets? • 50% reduction in deaths by the end of 7 years (with interim goals) • 50% reduction in consumption/customers • What sort of payment if targets are not met? • Call it a fee, fine, penalty, or tax • Substantial in amount to provide needed incentive • ALSO: If firms do better than their targets, provide them with a bonus (society benefits, Health Canada benefits)
Performance-based Regulation and Tobacco Products • Although it is long term mortality and morbidity we care most about… • A better target in the shorter run is customers/consumption • E.g., 50% reduced smoking prevalence rate in 7 years (say from 20% to 10%) • Possible “cap and trade” feature
Performance-based Regulation and Motor Vehicles/Drunk Driving • Say 50% reduction in highway fatalities in 7 years. • And/or 50% reduction in drunk driving deaths in 7 years. • For vehicles generally, allocate reduction goal to each auto maker based on its models involved in highway deaths • For drunk driving, allocate reduction to alcohol companies by market share
Performance-based Regulation and Junk Food • Focus on childhood obesity – set target at 50% reduction in 7 years • Identify junk food – say more than 30% fat or 40% sugar • Determine large firm market share of junk calories (i.e., above cutoff) • Assign responsibility by share
Performance-based Regulation Matching/Measuring • Tobacco – sales by maker • Vehicles – death by model • Junk food – identify schools with high childhood obesity levels, allocate schools to firms based on market share of responsibility • Drunk driving – allocate portion of the country based on market share
Why Performance-based Regulation • Firms whose products cause problem are held responsible for sharply reducing the problem • Firms are given incentives (penalty threat; bonuses) to serve the public good • Firms can be nimble, experiment, engage in innovation, competition to best figure out how to solve their problem • Firms not told what to do; can claim credit
Alternative Strategies to Performance-based Regulation:Command and ControlRegulation
Require disclosure of nutrition information on food products
Alternative Strategies to Performance-based Regulation:Command and Control • E.g., no Cokes in schools, air bags in cars, no cigarette sales to minors, no serving alcohol to those who will drink & drive • Input based (unlike PBR) • Firms told what to do (unlike PBR) • BUT regulators often don’t know what to demand, have not achieved enough, lock in old technology, capture, bureaucracy
Alternatives: Taxes and Subsidies • E.g. tobacco/alcohol tax; subsidize fresh veggies, tax corn syrup; tax credit for side air bags • Depends on price change causing increased or decreased demand • No assured outcome gains; indirect • Firms can undercut by absorbing • No reward to firm for better outcomes
Performance-based Regulation “Tax” v. Traditional Tax • PBR “tax” is only on the target shortfall – e.g. excess drunk driving deaths or excess smokers • PBR “tax” is on outcomes and taxed firms can eliminate tax by achieving target • PBR “tax” is large • Traditional tax is not on outcomes, rather it is on all sales, and usually modest in size
Alternatives: • E.g. public health appointees to product development committee, to marketing committee, to board of directors • This is a process solution that depends on subjecting firms to voice and transparency • No assured outcomes; capture/silencing concerns
Alternatives: Litigation • Sue product makers in tort for damages • Common law claims would be based on fault – as such they are “input” oriented, what exactly should firm have done differently • Judges (in the US juries) instead of agencies or legislatures decide what is reasonable • No assured outcomes, costly, inexpert
Alternatives: Strict Liability Litigation • Imagine true strict liability in tort • This is outcome oriented like PBR • Instead of PBR penalties paid to government, damages paid to victims/lawyers • But costs imposed for all victims, not just those beyond target (as though the target were 0) • It would create strong incentives for firms to figure out how to improve results • Legally unlikely?
Performance-based Regulation Concerns • Better outcomes but also other worse outcomes – less obesity, more anorexia (agency veto right) • Inaccurate measuring – keep obese kids home on weigh-in day (auditing) • Can regulated firms really help solve the problem? (contracting out) • What is an appropriate target? (50% in 7 years?) • What is the appropriate penalty? (social cost, but what is it?) • Competing, conflicting policies at the same time • Temptation to order solutions (consult v. impose)
Still • Performance-based regulation is how we are likely to attack “climate change” • Performance-based approaches are being used for schools and for other public contracts • Command and control plus traditional taxes just don’t seem to get us what we want (tobacco taxes and alcohol taxes help but not enough) • Public health community needs to open itself up to considering new ideas • Ideas that use private firms to promote public good
Contact • Stephen D. Sugarman • School of Law • University of California, Berkeley • sugarman@law.berkeley.edu • www.law.berkeley.edu/faculty/sugarmans