Evaluating Consent in Market Transactions
A subsistence farmer in a drought-stricken region is offered a large sum of money by a pharmaceutical company to participate in a high-risk clinical trial for a new drug. The payment is enough to feed his family for several years and provide clean water, but the potential side effects of the drug are severe and not fully understood. The farmer, seeing no other way to save his family from starvation, agrees to participate. Critically evaluate whether the farmer's consent to this transaction constitutes a genuinely voluntary agreement. Justify your position by analyzing the conditions under which the decision was made.
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Evaluating Consent in Market Transactions
The Land Sale
A person living in extreme poverty with no other viable options for feeding their family accepts a job in a hazardous factory for wages far below the standard for such work. Which statement best analyzes the nature of this individual's consent to the agreement?
Voluntary Exchange or Desperate Measure?
The 'coercion from poverty' argument posits that as long as a market transaction improves an individual's desperate situation compared to their other available options, the exchange can be considered fully voluntary.
Match each scenario involving a market transaction with the most relevant ethical critique of the agreement's voluntariness.
Clinical Trial Compensation
A widespread famine forces many small-scale farmers into extreme poverty. A large agricultural corporation offers to buy their land for a price that, while low, is enough to prevent their families from starving. Critics argue that these sales are not truly voluntary. Which of the following proposed government interventions would most directly address the core ethical problem of compromised consent in these transactions?
Evaluating Consent in a High-Stakes Transaction
A pharmaceutical company offers a payment equivalent to a full year's local average salary for participation in a clinical trial for a new drug with known, significant side-effects. The trial is being conducted in a region with high unemployment and poverty. An ethicist argues that the high payment, relative to local incomes, could unduly influence potential participants, making their consent questionable. Which of the following statements provides the strongest evaluation of the ethicist's argument?