The principle that workers and employers should use reason to determine fair wages based on actual human dignity and economic reality, not tradition or coercion.
Zera Yacob championed reason as the foundation for all human knowledge and ethics. In wage negotiation, this means both workers and employers must rationally examine what constitutes fair compensation. Rather than accepting wages set by arbitrary power or inherited custom, Yacob's philosophy demands that negotiating parties reason through the actual costs of living, the value of labor, and mutual obligations. This rational approach protects workers from exploitation by demanding transparent justification for wage levels. Employers similarly benefit by understanding that sustainable wages attract better workers and reduce turnover. Applied to modern labor economics, this concept challenges the notion that wages are merely market-determined abstractions, instead grounding them in reasoned analysis of human dignity and legitimate economic exchange.
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