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Law of Efficiency Privilege

The principle that certain definitions of efficiency are privileged over others—not because they're better but because they're associated with dominant institutions, classes, or power structures. The Law of Efficiency Privilege argues that what counts as efficient is shaped by who has power to define it. Corporate efficiency is privileged over worker efficiency; market efficiency over ecological efficiency; quantitative efficiency over qualitative. This privilege is invisible to those who benefit—they just think their efficiency is efficiency. The law calls for examining why certain efficiency measures are privileged, whose interests they serve, and what's excluded.
Example: "The policy was praised for its efficiency—by the corporations that would profit. Workers, communities, the environment—all saw it differently. The Law of Efficiency Privilege explained why corporate efficiency was the only one that counted: corporations had power to define the terms. Other efficiencies existed, but they were marginalized. He started asking whose efficiency was being privileged."
by Abzugal February 21, 2026
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