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E-mail Print Pacific Research Institute Releases First Objective State-By-State Ranking of the Best and Worst Tort Systems in America
Press Release
5.11.2006


Press Release
For Immediate Release:
May 11, 2006

Contact:
Sean McCabe: 703-683-5004 ext. 110
mailto:sean@crc4pr.com or

Susan Martin, PRI
(415) 955-6120
smartin@pacificresearch.org

WASHINGTON, D.C. – In the competition for jobs and capital investment among the states, those states that suffer from high tort costs will continue to lose jobs and businesses to states with superior tort systems, according to a new report released today by the Pacific Research Institute (PRI), a free-market think tank based in California. The U.S. Tort Liability Index: 2006 Report (available at http://www.pacificresearch.org//) ranks all 50 states in terms of relative tort burdens and relative tort reforms.

“What’s unique about this study is that it uses objective data, and with that data, can predict the winners and losers in the race for jobs and business investment. For states that don’t institute reforms – a metric factored into the ranking – the writing is on the wall,” said Dr. Lawrence J. McQuillan, co-author of the study and director of Business and Economic Studies at PRI. “We hope that governors and state legislators will use the Index as a tool to assess their tort systems and enact laws that will improve their ranking, and as a consequence, the business climate of their state.”

Texas on Top; Vermont at the Bottom
“Our study found that Texas has the best overall tort climate in terms of relative burdens and relative reforms, Vermont has the worst,” said Dr. McQuillan. “By placing monetary caps on damages and instituting a wide range of tort reforms, state officials have made Texas very attractive for businesses – it’s no surprise that the state has had a strong economy.”

In addition to Texas, the top five states were Colorado, North Dakota, Ohio, and Michigan. At the bottom were Vermont, Rhode Island, New York, Pennsylvania, and Maryland. The higher-ranking states tended to be in the Rocky Mountains and Great Plains, with some top performers – New Hampshire, Ohio, Texas, and Virginia – distributed across the country. The poorest-ranking states tended to be clustered in the Northeast and southern border. The Deep South and parts of the Southeast also ranked poorly.

The Saints, Sinners, and Salvageables
The study also categorized the states in terms of their prospective outlook. “But keep in mind that a state’s fate isn’t sealed. The ‘salvageables’ that have enacted reforms should move up in the rankings, and the ‘saints’ shouldn’t rest on their halos. With the trial bar always searching for legal loopholes and favorable forums, even the saints have to vigilantly guard their reforms.” said Dr. McQuillan.

Saints: The states that are well positioned to stay at the top in future rankings are states with relatively low monetary tort losses that have also enacted some significant reforms that will lower future losses. These states include Kansas, Michigan, Texas, Utah, and Virginia.

Salvageables: The states that are poised to move up in future rankings are those with medium or high relative monetary tort losses that have recently enacted meaningful reforms that will cut future losses. These states include Arizona, Georgia, Idaho, Louisiana, Mississippi, Missouri, New Hampshire, Rhode Island, and South Carolina. Of course, these states will move up only if they don’t enact subsequent laws that counteract the beneficial reforms and if they keep pace with other beneficial reforms enacted by other states.

Sinners: The states that are poised to fall in future rankings or stay at the bottom are those with relatively high monetary tort losses and significant threats that have enacted few if any comprehensive reforms. These states include Alabama, Florida, Illinois, Pennsylvania, and Vermont.

“A poor civil-justice system lowers the standard of living for ordinary citizens,” said co-author Hovannes Abramyan, a PRI public policy fellow. “By limiting job and business opportunities, imposing excessive costs on consumers, and inhibiting innovation in products and services, the many are suffering for the few who gain from unnecessary civil lawsuits,” he said.

 

###

Contact:

For a printed copy, please call 415-955-6120. To arrange an interview with authors Lawrence J. McQuillan and Hovannes Abramyan, please contact Susan Martin at 415.955.6120, smartin@pacificresearch.org or Sean McCabe at 703.683.5004 ext. 110, sean@crc4pr.com.

 

About PRI
For 27 years, the Pacific Research Institute (PRI) has championed freedom, opportunity, and individual responsibility through free-market policy solutions. PRI is a non-profit, non-partisan organization. For more information please visit our web site at http://www.pacificresearch.org//

 

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