Applying principles of fairness and equitable burden-sharing among siblings and family members in parental financial support.
Zera Yacob engaged with economic justice, arguing that reason reveals principles of fair distribution and mutual obligation. Within families, this challenges the assumption that one adult child must shoulder all caregiving costs while siblings contribute nothing. Economic justice asks: How should financial burden be distributed fairly among those capable of helping? What obligations do siblings share? What is equitable given different circumstances—income, debt, dependents, proximity? This framework moves beyond guilt-driven self-sacrifice toward transparent family conversations grounded in fairness. It may mean explicit agreements about cost-sharing, clear communication about capacity and limits, or difficult conversations about why support is unequal. Zera Yacob's tradition insists that justice within families—not just abstract principles—matters for human dignity and social cohesion. When caregiving burdens are distributed fairly, resentment diminishes and relationships strengthen. Economic justice within families is not coldly transactional; it honors both parental needs and the legitimate needs and limits of adult children.
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