Title: CLASSICAL LIBERALISM AND THE ABOLITION OF CERTAIN VOLUNTARY CONTRACTS
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Authors: David Ellerman |
Abstract: Classical liberalism tends to respond to the criticism of any voluntary market contract by promoting a
wider choice of options and increased information and bargaining power so that no one would seem
to be ‘forced’ or ‘tricked’ into an ‘unconscionable’ contract. Hence, at first glance, the strict logic of
the classical liberal freedom-of-contract philosophy would seem to argue against ever abolishing any
mutually voluntary contract between knowledgeable and consenting adults. Yet the modern liberal
democratic societies have abolished (i.e., treated as invalid) at least three types of historical contracts:
the voluntary slavery or perpetual servitude contract, the coverture marriage contract, and an
undemocratic constitution to establish an autocratic government. Thus, the rights associated with those
contracts are considered as inalienable. This paper analyzes these three contracts and shows that there
is indeed a deeper democratic or Enlightenment classical liberal tradition of jurisprudence that rules
out those contracts. The ‘problem’ is that the same principles imply the abolition of the employment
contract, the contract for renting human beings, which is the foundation for the economic system that
is often (but superficially) identified with classical liberalism itself. Frank Knight is taken throughout
as the exemplary advocate of the economics of conventional classical liberalism. |
Keywords: inalienable rights, voluntary slavery contract, coverture marriage contract, nondemocratic constitution, employment contract, renting of persons |
DOI: https://doi.org/10.37500/IJESSR.2025.8307 |
Date of Publication: 16-05-2025 |
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