Type | Working Paper |
Title | Evolution of Mehr and Dowry among Muslims in Bangladesh: Evidence from Natural Experiments |
Author(s) | |
Publication (Day/Month/Year) | 2015 |
URL | http://www.isid.ac.in/~epu/acegd2015/papers/ShyamalChowdhury.pdf |
Abstract | In this paper, we exploit a natural experiment to explain the fluctuations in the value of mehr and dowry observed since 1960s in Muslim marriages in Bangladesh. We show that these fluctuations are explained by the Green Revolution (GR) in the 1960s, the Independence War (IW) in 1971 and the famine in 1974. The positive income shock due to the GR increased the values of both dowry and mehr. However, the specific technologies adopted due to the GR also increased the demand for, and consequently the shadow price of, female labor within the household, which exerted downward pressure on the value of dowry. Therefore, the net effect on dowry was ambiguous. In contrast, the negative income effect of the war and famine had decreased the values of both dowry and mehr, and their values remained at lower levels in the absence of further shocks. Using two unique household survey datasets, we find support for our hypotheses. There were some important legal changes in Bangladesh to restrict polygamy and curb the practice of dowry that coincided with the GR and famine. To show that these legal changes have no effect on the values of dowry and mehr, we exploit another natural experiment from the Indian state of West Bengal that experienced similar economic shocks but no legal changes. These results have important implications in that natural shocks may influence the evolution of social institutions in eminent ways. |
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