סמינר באסטרטגיה
An Incomplete Contracting Approach to Administrative Law
Speaker: Yehonatan Givati from the Hebrew University
Abstract:
Across areas of law administrative agencies employ four basic policy-making
instruments: rulemaking, adjudication, advance ruling and licensing.
How should administrative agencies choose among these policymaking
instruments? I develop a model which captures the idea that
rules are inherently incomplete, and focuses on the strategic interaction
between agencies and firms. While rule-making allows agencies to commit
to a policy, it does not allow the policy to be narrowly tailored to the
circumstances of specific firms. Adjudication allows agencies to harness
information that firms have to narrowly tailor the policy to their circumstances,
but since under it the policy is adopted after firms have already
acted, two time-inconsistency problems arise. Supplementing adjudication
with advance ruling eliminates one of these problems. Licensing eliminates
both problems, but only by requiring costly licenses even in cases where
they do not arise. Agencies’ choice of policy-making instrument depends
on firm heterogeneity and the cost of pre approval procedures.