To increase R&D incentives, governments typically implement a variety of policies — such as patents and subsidies — directly targeted at innovation investments. To assess and quantify the effects of these policies is a key focus of the innovation literature. Only recently, economists have recognized that policies not directly targeted at innovation investments may also have large impacts on R&D incentives and on the direction of technological progress. Documenting and quantifying these indirect and dynamic effects is crucial not only to understanding the determinants of innovation activities, but also to evaluating the costs and benefits of policy reforms. Our work examines the innovation investment response to a prominently debated public policy: tort reform.
Torts are actions that injure someone and are recognized by law as grounds for a lawsuit. The role of the tort system is to deter people from injuring others. An important class of torts related to professional negligence is medical malpractice. A danger prominently voiced in public debates is that large settlements arising from medical malpractice litigation lead doctors to practice “defensive medicine” — that is, to perform excessive tests and procedures because of concerns about malpractice liability. Policy debates on this subject typically contrast the high costs of defensive medicine procedures with their low expected benefits to patients. A number of studies have investigated the relationship between the tort system and treatment intensity or medical expenditures, and they provide evidence of the practice of defensive medicine.
In addition to their effects on procedure use and malpractice claims, tort reforms may also affect R&D investments and technological change. In particular, a number of legal scholars have warned about a possible “chilling effect” of the current tort system on innovation; that is, high damage awards and the court’s reliance on custom may reduce physicians’ willingness to adopt new but riskier technologies, even if they are potentially superior to customary treatments. This idea that liability retards innovation has become a key argument for tort reform advocates and has gained substantial ground over the years in courts and in Congress. A typical counterargument is that high liabilities may also encourage innovation because they induce physicians to defensively adopt innovative technologies that are themselves safer or that help physicians manage risks. Despite these claims, the empirical literature on the relationship between liability risk and innovation is scarce. We address this gap by studying the impact of tort reform on innovation in the medical device sector, a field of technology closely linked to malpractice litigation.