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Date: | Sun, 11 Oct 2009 10:16:50 -0400 |
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> Would a workplace where people have to submit to the
> authority of a boss constitute voluntary behavior?
> Michael Perelman
As James Buchanan and others have written in the rubric of
constitutional economics, there are two levels of decision, the
constitutional and the operational.
For example, getting married is a constitutional choice. One knows
that when married, one will have to compromise, and normally will
have to go along with decisions one disagrees with.
The voluntariness of action is at the constitutional level. One then
agrees to rules which in particular operations may be disagreeable.
Thus when one enters into an employment contract, that is a voluntary
constitutional choice. One knows that operationally one will be
under the authority of a boos, not always pleasantly, but that is the
package one chose.
In a free society, constitutional choices and contracts have an exit
option. For example, one may get a divorce from marriage. Thus
perpetual slavery is not voluntary, since one may not exit even if
one voluntarily chose to become a slave.
Fred Foldvary
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