Procedural Fairness as the Sole Criterion for Justice
One viewpoint on fairness holds that any level of inequality in an outcome is acceptable, provided that the 'rules of the game' or the procedures that led to it were fair and impartial. In this view, the justice of the process is the paramount concern, not the equality of the final distribution.
0
1
Tags
Library Science
Economics
Economy
Introduction to Microeconomics Course
Social Science
Empirical Science
Science
CORE Econ
Ch.5 The rules of the game: Who gets what and why - The Economy 2.0 Microeconomics @ CORE Econ
The Economy 2.0 Microeconomics @ CORE Econ
Related
Context-Dependent Fairness in Dividing a Windfall
Diverse Criteria for Substantive Fairness
Fairness, Happiness, and Income Disparity Due to Health Status
Activity: Evaluating Fairness in a Familiar Society
Procedural Fairness as the Sole Criterion for Justice
Substantive Fairness Based on Basic Needs
John Rawls (1921–2002)
Role and Limitations of Economics in Resolving Value Disagreements
Two city planners are debating how to allocate a limited number of new public housing units. Planner A argues that the units should be given to the families with the lowest current incomes, as this would provide the greatest benefit to those in most desperate need. Planner B argues that the units should be allocated via a lottery system open to all residents below a certain income threshold, believing that everyone who qualifies should have an equal chance. What does this disagreement fundamentally demonstrate about evaluating economic allocations?
Disagreement on Fair Bonus Distribution
Analyzing Competing Views of Fairness
Two individuals are observing the same economic situation but disagree on whether it is fair. Match each proposed fairness criterion with the statement that best reflects that viewpoint.
In evaluating an economic situation, if two analysts use the same complete and accurate data but reach different conclusions about its fairness, it signifies that at least one of the analysts has made an error in their economic reasoning.
Interpreting Disagreements on Fairness
Evaluating Fairness in Disaster Relief Allocation
A company decides to award a year-end bonus, giving larger amounts to employees who worked the most overtime hours. An employee who was unable to work overtime due to family care responsibilities complains this is unfair, arguing that performance during standard hours should be the only metric. The company maintains its system is fair because it rewards extra effort. Which of the following statements best analyzes this disagreement?
Resource Allocation and Competing Fairness Claims
Evaluating Fairness in Community Resource Distribution
Learn After
Incentives for Innovation vs. Lobbying
Fairness of a Lottery System
Two entrepreneurs start competing businesses in the same market. They are both subject to the exact same laws, regulations, and tax policies. Neither faces any legal discrimination or barriers to entry. After several years, one entrepreneur becomes extremely wealthy, while the other's business fails. From a perspective that considers only the fairness of the process as the standard for justice, how should this outcome be evaluated?
Evaluating a Promotion Outcome
From a viewpoint where the fairness of the process is the only standard for justice, a society with a large wealth gap is automatically considered unjust, even if everyone had an equal opportunity to accumulate wealth.
Critique of Process-Based Justice
Two students compete for a prestigious university scholarship. Student X comes from a high-income family and has benefited from expensive private tutoring. Student Y comes from a low-income family with limited access to educational resources. The scholarship is awarded based on the single highest score on a standardized exam, which is administered and graded identically for all applicants. Student X scores higher and wins the scholarship. According to a viewpoint where the fairness of the process is the only criterion for justice, which of the following statements best analyzes this situation?
Justice in a Competitive Race
A specific viewpoint on justice argues that any outcome is fair as long as the procedures leading to it were impartial and applied equally to all participants. Evaluate the following scenarios based only on this viewpoint, and match each one to the correct assessment of its outcome.
A government holds a public auction for a valuable, limited resource. The rules of the auction are publicly known, transparent, and applied identically to all bidders. A single, extremely wealthy corporation is able to outbid all other competitors and acquires the entire resource, leading to a market monopoly. From a viewpoint that considers the fairness of the process as the only criterion for justice, how should this outcome be evaluated?
Evaluating a Promotion Outcome