Bases for the Economic Analysis of Criminal Compliance Systems

Authors

  • Diego Hernán Goldman Universidad de Palermo

    Abogado por la Universidad de Buenos Aires. Magíster en Economía y Ciencias Políticas por la ESEADE. Docente de posgrado de la Universidad de Palermo. Director General de Asuntos Jurídicos del Ministerio de Seguridad de la República Argentina.

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.18800/iusetveritas.201802.001

Keywords:

Compliance, Economic Analysis of Criminal Law, Criminal Liability of Corporations, White Collar Crimes

Abstract

Compliance programs and systems of criminal or administrative liability are being increasingly adopted by different countries as measures meant to reduce the social cost of white collar criminality. However, the legal application of these measures does not always ponder correctly the impacts on common good, the levels of economic activity and the adequate functioning of markets of goods and services. Eventually, this situation can lead to undesired effects, such as the inefficiency of the criminal system, the reduction of economic activity or the arising of obstacles to competition. By taking these circumstances into account, in this paper we will utilize the Economic Analysis of Law to analyze the logic that inspires these legal institutes and the incentives they generate. Our objective is to delineate some parameters that allow legislators, judges, legal advisors and businessmen to evaluate different compliance systems in terms of economic efficiency, generation of wealth and the promotion of competition in markets.

Downloads

Download data is not yet available.

Published

2019-04-15

How to Cite

Goldman, D. H. (2019). Bases for the Economic Analysis of Criminal Compliance Systems. IUS ET VERITAS, (57), 14–28. https://doi.org/10.18800/iusetveritas.201802.001

Issue

Section

Main Section