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Statement
of Ethical Principles and Principles of Professional Practice National
Association of Forensic Economics (NAFE)
When providing expert opinion for use as evidence by the tier of fact,
a NAFE member pledges, as a condition of membership, adherence to the
following:
1. Engagement
Practitioners of forensic economics should decline involvement in any
litigation when they are asked to assume invalid representations of
fact or alter their methodologies without foundation or compelling
analytical reason.
2. Compensation
Practitioners of forensic economics should not accept contingency fee
arrangements, or fee amounts associated with the size of a court award
or out-of-court settlement.
3. Diligence
Practitioners of forensic economics should employ generally accepted
and/or theoretically sound economic methodologies based on reliable
economic data. Practitioners of forensic economics should attempt to
provide accurate, fair and reasonable expert opinions, recognizing that
it is not the responsibility of the practitioner to verify the accuracy
or completeness of the case-specific information that has been provided.
4. Disclosure
Practitioners of forensic economics should stand ready to provide
sufficient detail to allow replication of all numerical calculations,
with reasonable effort, by other competent forensic economics experts,
and be prepared to provide sufficient disclosure of sources of
information and assumptions underpinning their opinions to make them
understandable to others.
While it is recognized that practitioners of forensic economics may be
given a different assignment when engaged on behalf of the plaintiff
than when engaged on behalf of the defense, for any given assignment,
the basic assumptions, sources, and methods should not change
regardless of the party who engages the expert to perform the
assignment. There should be no change in methodology for purposes of
favoring any party's claim.
This requirement of consistency is not meant to preclude methodological
changes as new knowledge evolves, nor is it meant to preclude
performing requested calculations based upon a hypothetical--as long as
its hypothetical nature is clearly disclosed in the expert's report and
testimony.
6. Knowledge
Practitioners of forensic economics should strive to maintain a current
knowledge base of their discipline.
7. Discourse
Open, uninhibited discussion is a desired educational feature of
academic and professional forensic economic conferences. Therefore, to
preserve and protect the educational environment, practitioners of
forensic economics will refrain from the citation of oral remarks made
in an educational environment, without permission from the speaker.
8. Responsibility
Practitioners of forensic economics are encouraged to make known the
existence of, and their adherence to, these principles to those
retaining them to perform economic analyses and to other participants
in litigation. In addition, it is appropriate for practitioners of
forensic economics to offer criticisms of breaches of these principles.
The NAFE board establishes the following statement as a condition of
membership in NAFE as of October 1, 2004
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