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77 SMU L. Rev. F. 1 (2024)

handle is hein.journals/smulrf77 and id is 1 raw text is: 


COPYRIGHT © 2024 SMU LAw REVIEW ASSOCIATION



        SMU Law Review Forum




Volume 77                 _January 2024 _1-26


        UNCONSCIONABILITY AND POVERTY

                              Mark  Kelman*


                              ABSTRACT

   Matthew Desmond   made the claim in Evicted, his powerful work on housing
insecurity, that those concerned with alleviating poverty should focus not merely
on ensuring that poor people have higher disposable incomes, but on countering
the exploitative price gouging that depresses the value of whatever income they
have. This suggests the possibility that it might be a worthwhile anti-poverty
strategy for courts to use the unconscionability doctrine to regulate exploitative
contracts.
   Three main issues follow from considering this possibility: (1) Do the poor
actually pay more for goods of the same quality? (2) If they indeed pay more,
do  they do so because  prices are exploitative? How should we  define an
exploitative price, and how can we identify that any particular group of buyers
is  indeed  exploited? (3) Could   courts  seeking to  make   use  of  the
unconscionability doctrine realistically identify cases in which poor people
generally are overcharged, or will courts successfully invoke the doctrine to
challenge unwarranted prices only when  the price a particular seller charges
exceeds some  benchmark  (e.g., the price charged before an emergency or the
price charged to other buyers in highly similar transactions)?
  While  there is (reasonably) good evidence that the poor pay more for equal
quality goods and it is possible (but very hard to determine) that exploitative
pricing is a genuine issue as well, efforts to use the unconscionability doctrine
to solve the problem of exploitative contracts are quite unlikely to succeed.
Doctrinal and practical constraints make this solution a bad fit. If we worry, for
example,  that small stores in urban areas with high concentrations of poor
residents overcharge, we should probably look to establishing and sustaining


DOI: https://doi.org/10.25172/slrf.77.1.1
James  C. Gaither Professor of Law and Vice Dean, Stanford Law School. Thanks to John
Donohue, Colleen Honigsberg, Curtis Milhaupt, and above all, Eric Talley for feedback and
assistance. Errors, of course, remain mine.


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