Further Reading on Unfairness and Its Perpetuation
For a more comprehensive exploration of what people consider unfair, the different forms of unfairness, and how these injustices are sustained, one can consult resources like Unit 19 of The Economy 1.0 and the CORE Econ Insight on persistent racial inequality in the United States.
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Ch.5 The rules of the game: Who gets what and why - The Economy 2.0 Microeconomics @ CORE Econ
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Further Reading on Unfairness and Its Perpetuation
An influential 18th-century economist argued that while markets should be largely free, the state has a few essential functions. Match each specific government action below to the core government role it best represents according to this economist's framework.
Procedural Fairness in a Real-World Competition
Fairness in Business Negotiations
Consider two negotiation scenarios. In Scenario A, two anonymous participants are randomly assigned roles to divide a fixed sum of money under a clear set of rules where both have the power to veto the outcome, resulting in neither party receiving anything. In Scenario B, a powerful, well-established corporation negotiates a land-use contract with a small, low-income community that has few alternative economic options and limited access to legal expertise. From the perspective of procedural fairness, what is the most significant difference between these two scenarios?
Contrasting Fairness in Economic Models and Reality
The primary reason real-world economic outcomes are often judged as more unfair than those in a simple, two-person bargaining experiment is that people in the real world are inherently more greedy than the participants in the experiment.
Evaluating Procedural Fairness in Public Policy
A simple, two-person bargaining experiment is often used to study fairness. However, its rules differ significantly from the conditions of many real-world economic interactions. Match each characteristic below to the context it best describes.
Evaluating Fairness in an Employment Negotiation
A large tech company lays off a 15-year veteran employee, citing company-wide restructuring. The employee is offered a standard, non-negotiable severance package. In a simple, two-person bargaining experiment, the rules are often designed to be procedurally fair (e.g., random role assignment, clear rules for all). Which aspect of the employee's situation best illustrates a key departure from the procedural fairness of such an experiment?
Consider two negotiation scenarios. In Scenario A, two anonymous participants are randomly assigned roles to divide a fixed sum of money under a clear set of rules where both have the power to veto the outcome, resulting in neither party receiving anything. In Scenario B, a powerful, well-established corporation negotiates a land-use contract with a small, low-income community that has few alternative economic options and limited access to legal expertise. From the perspective of procedural fairness, what is the most significant difference between these two scenarios?