A framework for quantifying favoritism's invisible expenses: broken relationships, diminished trust, and lost human potential.
Contemporary organizations often ignore the massive costs favoritism extracts. Rabia's framework of pure love provides metrics for these invisible expenses. The love tax includes: relationships damaged by perceived injustice; psychological energy spent managing resentment; talent wasted when capable people feel disfavored; institutional knowledge lost when demoralized members disengage; and creativity suppressed in communities divided by hierarchy. In families, the love tax appears as estrangement—siblings who resent parents' clear preferences; in organizations, as turnover and reduced collaboration; in communities, as fractured belonging. These costs rarely appear in explicit accounting but accumulate as attrition of connection. Rabia's commitment to unconditional devotion implicitly rejects such accounting, offering instead a spiritual economics based on abundant giving. When leaders consciously measure the real costs of favoritism—what it costs in trust, innovation, and human flourishing—they become motivated to dismantle it. This framework makes invisible harms visible, creating leverage for systemic change toward more equitable community practices.
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