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Politics : View from the Center and Left

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To: TimF who wrote (11095)2/7/2006 1:17:46 PM
From: Lane3  Read Replies (1) of 541582
 
It is assumed that the silver and the fish are of the same value when sold. If a different value is given to the two different employees you have a different hypothetical situation.

This has been the problem with that analogy all along. The stated premise was that they payment in fish was equivalent to the payment in silver. That means that any liquidity differences have already been factored in.

Yes, as you say, if the value is different, then we may have an equal opportunity problem if the workers weren't free to accept the contracts in fish vs. silver.

Try as I may, I can't seem to find anything that would explain a charge of unfairness here. I simply cannot get my head around the notion that workers should be paid in perpetuity for a day's work unless, of course, they want to take their wages in installments. Likewise an investor. I haven't been offered any justification nor can I conjure one. Payment is delivered as required by the contract. In either case, when the contract is fulfilled, the contract ends.
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