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Original scientific paper

https://doi.org/10.52685/cjp.25.73.5

Rejoinder to Wysocki and Dominiak on Blackmail Law and Austrian Economic Welfare Theory

Walter E. Block orcid id orcid.org/0000-0003-2215-4791 ; Loyola University New Orleans, New Orleans, USA


Full text: english pdf 190 Kb

page 71-82

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Abstract

Wysocki and Dominiak (2023) defend the thesis that blackmail is only beneficial, relatively, since the target of this offer values his secrecy more than the money he must pay. However, he loses absolutely, since the blackmailee would have been even better off if the blackmailer had disappeared from the scene, and/or never made his demand in the first place. In their view, the blackmailer is thus akin to the highwayman who offers you the choice of your money or your life. You value the latter more highly, so you “gain” by complying, but only in this relative sense. However you lose absolutely, since you would have been even better off had there been no highwayman threatening you, in the first place. This is in sharp contrast to the person who sells you a car. There, you gain in both cases: you value the auto more highly than its price, otherwise you would not make the purchase, and, you would not be better off if he disappeared. The present paper is critical of this thesis.

Keywords

Justice; Austrian economics; economic welfare; libertarianism.

Hrčak ID:

330370

URI

https://hrcak.srce.hr/330370

Publication date:

25.4.2025.

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