I’m more in favor of creating a pool of professional jurors for liability trials. Create a group of people who are educated in the laws concerning liability and then draw randomly from the pool for each trial. The costs of training and paying these jurors will be more than offset by the savings of maintaining the current jury system and by the reduction in the length of trials and the number of mistrials.
Walter, slightly off-topic, but something you might like to address in a future post: Jim Henley, now with Ezra Klein and Matt Yglesias on board, is arguing that when health-care reform opponents contend that reform will reduce innovation, they’re being disingenuous because tort reform, which they favor, would also reduce innovation.
Whatever one might think about tort reform, it seems to me that the idea that it would reduce medical innovation is insupportable. But Walter, you might be able to address that question better than I.
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I’m more in favor of creating a pool of professional jurors for liability trials. Create a group of people who are educated in the laws concerning liability and then draw randomly from the pool for each trial. The costs of training and paying these jurors will be more than offset by the savings of maintaining the current jury system and by the reduction in the length of trials and the number of mistrials.
Walter, slightly off-topic, but something you might like to address in a future post: Jim Henley, now with Ezra Klein and Matt Yglesias on board, is arguing that when health-care reform opponents contend that reform will reduce innovation, they’re being disingenuous because tort reform, which they favor, would also reduce innovation.
Whatever one might think about tort reform, it seems to me that the idea that it would reduce medical innovation is insupportable. But Walter, you might be able to address that question better than I.