Evaluating 'Gratitude Payments' in Adoption
A government is considering a new policy for private adoptions. The policy would allow prospective adoptive parents to make a direct, unrestricted 'gratitude payment' to a birth mother, with the amount negotiated privately and potentially reaching tens of thousands of dollars. Proponents argue this simply recognizes the birth mother's sacrifice and helps her financially. Evaluate this proposed policy. In your evaluation, justify whether this system maintains the ethical distinction between a permitted adoption process and a prohibited market for children. What specific features of the proposal support your conclusion?
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Social Science
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Economy
CORE Econ
Economics
Introduction to Microeconomics Course
The Economy 2.0 Microeconomics @ CORE Econ
Related
The Economic Dilemma of Prohibiting Infant Markets
An economist argues, 'From a purely economic efficiency standpoint, allowing a regulated market for infants would be beneficial. It would match willing suppliers (birth parents) with willing demanders (adoptive parents) at a price, ensuring children go to those who value them most highly, as measured by their willingness to pay.' Which of the following statements provides the most robust critique of this economist's argument by challenging the appropriateness of the market mechanism itself in this context?
Ethical Boundaries of Markets: Adoption vs. Sale
Market Boundaries and Human Dignity
Adoption Fees vs. Child Sales: A Market Limitation
The primary reason for the legal prohibition on selling infants is to prevent price gouging and ensure affordability for all prospective parents, treating it as a regulated market for an essential service.
The legal and ethical framework that permits child adoption (which can involve significant fees for services) but strictly prohibits the direct sale of children is based on a fundamental principle about the moral limits of markets. Which of the following scenarios best illustrates the application of the SAME underlying principle?
The prohibition on selling infants, while allowing for adoption processes that involve fees, highlights how society places ethical limits on certain types of exchanges. Match each transaction below with the principle that best describes its relationship to market norms.
Evaluating 'Gratitude Payments' in Adoption
Distinguishing Fees from Prices in Human Transactions
Analyzing a 'Benevolent Gift' in Adoption