TY - JOUR AU - Shavell,Steven TI - On Optimal Legal Change, Past Behavior, and Grandfathering JF - National Bureau of Economic Research Working Paper Series VL - No. 13563 PY - 2007 Y2 - October 2007 UR - http://www.nber.org/papers/w13563 L1 - http://www.nber.org/papers/w13563.pdf N1 - Author contact info: Steven Shavell Harvard Law School 1575 Massachusetts Avenue Hauser Hall 508 Cambridge, MA 02138 Tel: 617/495-3668 Fax: 617/496-2256 E-Mail: shavell@law.harvard.edu AB - When is it socially advantageous for legal rules to be changed in the light of altered circumstances? In answering this basic question here, a simple point is developed -- that past compliance with legal rules tends to reduce the social advantages of legal change. The reasons are twofold: adjusting to a new legal rule often involves costs; and the social benefits of change are frequently only incremental, only in addition to those of past compliance. The general implications are that legal rules should be more stable than would be appropriate were the relevance of past behavior not recognized, and that a policy of grandfathering, namely, of permitting noncompliance, should sometimes be employed. The analysis of these points has broad relevance, applying across legal fields, often explaining what we observe but also indicating possibilities for reform, such as in the regulation of air pollution. The analysis is related to the conventional reliance-based justification for the stability of the law, the literature on legal transitions, and economic writing on optimal legal standards. ER -