TY - BOOK AU - Rubin,Jared TI - Social insurance, commitment, and the origin of law: interest bans in early christianity SN - 00222186 AV - HB73 JOU PY - 2009/// CY - Chicago PB - University of Chicago Press KW - Charity KW - Christian history KW - Insurance providers KW - Social insurance KW - Economic agents KW - Economic models N2 - Despite the historical importance of ideology‐based, economically inhibitive laws, we know little about the economic factors underlying their origin. This paper accounts for the historical emergence of one such law: the Christian ban on taking interest—a doctrine that shaped the evolution of numerous financial contracts and related organizational forms. A game‐theoretic analysis and historical evidence suggest that the Church’s commitment to providing social insurance for its poorest constituents encouraged risky borrowing, which the Church attempted to limit by banning interest. The analysis highlights the applicability of the rational choice framework to seemingly irrational actions and laws, the role of nonmonetary sanctions in circumventing commitment problems, and the importance of economic forces vis‐à‐vis ideology UR - https://doi.org/10.1086/595796 ER -