
|
|

Imposing Liability for Losses from
Aggressive War: An Economic Analysis of the UNCC
Merritt B. Fox
Full text available: PDF format *
Abstract
Through an economic analysis of the work of the United Nations
Compensation Commission (UNCC), this Comment seeks to understand better the
process by which liability is imposed for losses caused by aggressive war. It
concludes that a loss is appropriately compensable by an aggressor state if the
war is a "but for" cause of the loss and ex ante the war increased the
likelihood that the loss would occur. The loss need not be as foreseeable as in
the law of negligence. The total amount of losses appropriately compensable
under this standard may, however, exceed the maximum that is desirable or even
practical to collect. Iraq involves such a shortfall. Collecting more would
hinder its reintegration into the world community. Moreover, any increase in
the UNCC tax rate on Iraq's oil revenues is likely to reduce, not enhance,
total revenues because of the added disincentives to export. Because of this
shortfall, the practice of denying Iraq formal access to UNCC proceedings
involves no procedural unfairness. The UNCC is effectively only deciding who,
among all claimants against Iraq, should receive money from a fixed, maximally
extractable sum. UNCC decisions also violate no norm of substantive fairness.
The money extracted by the UNCC and the economic effect of the more formal
sanctions imposed on Iraq, while both burdens on the Iraqi people, do not raise
comparable fairness issues. As a general matter, imposing the losses on the
people of the aggressor state, even if onerous, is not more unfair than leaving
them to be borne by the victims of the aggressive war. Moreover, payments to
the UNCC are in essence a tax on Iraq's oil wealth, not on the fruits of the
labour, skills and non-oil resources of the Iraqi people. Unlike the more
formal sanctions, the UNCC payments simply deprive the Iraqi people of a
portion of the good luck they had to have oil resources in the first place.

* The free viewer (Acrobat Reader) for PDF file
is available at the
Adobe
Systems.

|
|
© 1990-2004 European Journal of International Law
All comments and suggestions should be sent to webmaster
This site is part
of the Academy of European Law online, a joint partnership of the Jean Monnet Center at NYU School of Law and the Academy of European
Law at the European University
Institute.
This file was last modified:
Friday, June 04, 2004 04:51AM
|