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    Labor markets allocate work conditions in accordance with... — Carmelics
    Home/Consequentialism
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    Supports→The apparent scarcity of meaningful work reflects worker preferences rather than market failure

    Labor markets allocate work conditions in accordance with worker preferences

    ConsequentialismSocial Contract
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    ConsequentialismSocial Contract

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    The apparent scarcity of meaningful work reflects worker preferences rather than...Workers are willing to trade meaningfulness for other benefits such as higher wa...

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    The apparent scarcity of meaningful work reflects worker preferences r...73%Sweatshop employment is mutually beneficial to employer and worker68%If a selection condition requires that upward preference changes keep ...67%Players are driven by preferences when making evaluations.67%

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    Smith’s insight that labor processes are more efficient when they are divided into meaningless segments leads some writers to believe that, in a competitive economy, firms will not provide as much meaningful work as workers want (Werhane 1985). In response, it has been argued that there is a market for labor, and if workers want meaningful work, then employers have an incentive to provide it (Maitland 1989; Nozick 1974). According to this argument, insofar as we see “too little” meaningful work

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