三分之一规则

The Rule of One‐Third

Journal of Legal Studies · 2002
被引 12
ABS 3

中文导读

研究了古代法律中妻子在婚姻解体时获得丈夫三分之一遗产的“三分之一规则”,发现该规则在父母对孩子人力资本同等重要时出现,并由家族族长或现代法律机构执行,能解决夫妻间的契约问题。

Abstract

The Rule of One‐Third guaranteed wives a life interest in one‐third of their husband’s estate upon marital dissolution. We document the ubiquity of this legal construct and demonstrate that children’s outcomes are imperiled absent a wife’s residual claim on her husband’s estate. Using ancient Roman law as an example, we argue that the patriarch, or paterfamilias, is the primary legal entity with an interest in creating and enforcing the Rule of One‐Third. In a game‐theoretic model, we show that the Rule of One‐Third obtains when mothers and fathers are equally important in producing children’s human capital and when it is enforced by the paterfamilias or by modern legal institutions. The Rule of One‐Third places the cost of marital dissolution on the household rather than society and solves a contracting problem between the husband and wife when each is specialized in tasks the other cannot perform well.

法律经济学家庭经济学婚姻法人力资本