Learn Before
Influence of Institutions on the Distribution, Fairness, and Efficiency of Economic Outcomes
Workplace Injury Compensation on Pirate Ships
Pirate constitutions included provisions that functioned as a form of social insurance. The articles guaranteed that crew members who were seriously injured during combat would receive compensation for their injuries.
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Social Science
Empirical Science
Science
CORE Econ
Economics
Economy
Introduction to Microeconomics Course
The Economy 2.0 Microeconomics @ CORE Econ
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Learn After
Pirate articles of agreement often included a system where crew members received a pre-determined payment if they were seriously injured in battle, such as losing a limb. From an economic perspective, what was the most likely primary effect of this system on the crew's behavior?
The Quartermaster's Proposal
The Economic Rationale for Pirate Compensation
The Economic Purpose of Pirate Injury Compensation
A key feature of many pirate articles of agreement was a system of fixed compensation for injuries sustained in battle. Match each economic principle below to the specific aspect of this system it best describes.
A pirate captain who decided to eliminate the established system of injury compensation but offered a significantly larger share of potential future prizes in its place would likely find it more difficult to recruit a crew.
Applying the Pirate Articles of Agreement
A common practice on 18th-century pirate ships was an 'articles of agreement' system where a fixed, pre-determined sum was guaranteed to any crew member for a specific major injury sustained in battle (e.g., loss of a limb). Consider an alternative system where, instead of a fixed amount, the crew would vote after a battle on a 'fair' compensation for an injured member from that battle's spoils. From an economic standpoint, what is the primary advantage of the fixed, pre-determined payment system for managing the crew's collective risk?
The system of pre-determined payments for injuries on pirate ships, which guaranteed a payout to crew members for losses like a limb or an eye, effectively functioned as a form of ______ by pooling the crew's collective risk and providing financial security against disability.
Two 18th-century pirate crews are governed by different rules for injury compensation.
- Crew 1: Operates under articles that guarantee a pre-determined, fixed payment (e.g., 600 pieces of eight for a lost leg) from the ship's general fund to any member seriously injured in combat. This payment is made before any prize money is divided among the crew.
- Crew 2: Operates under a system where an injured member receives an extra full share of the loot from the next captured prize, but there is no other form of compensation.
Evaluate these two systems. From an economic standpoint, which system is superior for ensuring the crew consistently commits to high-risk, aggressive combat, and why?