For over a century, English husbands sold their wives at auctions. We argue that wife sales were an institutional response to an unusual constellation of property rights in Industrial Revolution-era English law. That constellation simultaneously required most wives to obtain their husbands’ consent to exit their marriages and denied most wives the right to own property. In doing so it precluded direct Coasean divorce bargains between spouses that could dissolve inefficient marriages when wives’ valuation of life outside their marriages was higher than husbands’ valuation of life inside them. To overcome this problem, spouses used wife sales to conduct divorce bargains indirectly. Wifesale auctions achieved this by identifying and leveraging “suitors” — men who valued unhappy wives more than their current husbands, who unhappy wives preferred to their current husbands, and who had the property rights required to buy unhappy wives’ right to exit marriage from their husbands. The resulting transactions enabled unhappy wives in inefficient marriages to exit those marriages where English law otherwise prevented them from doing so.
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18 December 2014
Research Article|
December 18 2014
Wife Sales*
Peter T. Leeson;
Peter T. Leeson
George Mason University
, Department of Economics, MS 3G4, Fairfax, VA 22030, USA
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Peter J. Boettke;
Peter J. Boettke
George Mason University
, Department of Economics, MS 3G4, Fairfax, VA 22030, USA
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Jayme S. Lemke
Jayme S. Lemke
Political Theory Project,
Brown University Box 2005
, 8 Fones Alley, Providence, RI 02912, USA
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*
We thank an anonymous reviewer for helpful comments and suggestions.
Online ISSN: 2326-6201
Print ISSN: 2326-6198
© 2014 P. T. Leeson, P. J. Boettke and J. S. Lemke
2014
P. T. Leeson, P. J. Boettke and J. S. Lemke
Licensed re-use rights only
Review of Behavioral Economics (2014) 1 (4): 349–379.
Citation
Leeson PT, Boettke PJ, Lemke JS (2014), "Wife Sales*". Review of Behavioral Economics, Vol. 1 No. 4 pp. 349–379, doi: https://doi.org/10.1561/105.00000014
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