Robert McClelland, Attorney-General in Australia's Labor Party government, proposed measure aimed at widening "access to justice" but "warn[ed] it would be unfortunate if Australia were to go down the American path, with costly speculative cases bogging the courts and leading to soaring insurance costs."
Australian AG: let's not go down US path
Related Entries:
- Around the web, July 29
- "Crist's costly populism"
- "That nice Mr. Smith does not have to pay this personally, does he?"
- New study: Illinois med-mal ruling to boost insurers' costs 18%
- Florida's property-insurance "public option"
- Adverse selection and insurance regulation
- "The Effects of Tort Reform on Medical Malpractice Insurers' Ultimate Losses"
- Grace & Leverty on tort reform and insurance rates, cont'd
- At policyholders' expense
- Massachusetts med mal: Prof. Marc Rodwin responds
- Marc A. Rodwin et al., Malpractice Premiums In Massachusetts
- Business misconduct? Tap the homeowner's policy
- Texas reforms reduce malpractice costs
- Europe going our way?
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| Isaac Gorodetski Project Manager, Center for Legal Policy at the Manhattan Institute igorodetski@manhattan-institute.org |
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| Bridget Carroll Press Officer, Manhattan Institute bcarroll@manhattan-institute.org |



