Wednesday, February 14, 2007

Interesting thought by my roommate...

So when I was telling my roommate about the Hopson vs. Daimler Chrysler case, she made an interesting comment. When I mentioned that Daimler Chrysler kept hiring people with less education than Hobson had or even than the job asked for, she said maybe that was a good business decision to hire someone you can train and pay less. While I think clearly there was discrimination going on in this case, her comment made me wonder if perhaps he was overqualified for the positions he applied for. As someone with both a masters and a bachelors degree, he might not be the best candidate for the company to hire because they would have to pay him more than other hires. And I wonder if there actually are discrimination cases that stem from people being overqualified. Just a thought...

2 Comments:

Blogger Professor Prenkert said...

Certainly overqualification, if true and the actual motivating factor in a decision, would be a legitimate, non-discriminatory reason for a decision not to hire someone. One practical problem of such a justification is that I think most people tend to be suspicious of that reason, unless it is tied to some sort of inflexible pay scale (like in a unionized workforce). So the "overqualification" explanation is really one of "expense." That happens to experienced teachers all the time.

Your roommate's intuition is good; however, DaimlerChrysler never suggested that was its motivation in Hopson's case.

11:36 PM  
Blogger Ryan E Gralia said...

Let's assume over qualification was the motivating factor. Could DiamlerChrysler offered him the position, but with pay similar to the recent graduates? I think this would eliminate discrimination and allow for a logical business decision. Hobson might not have agreed with the pay issue, but DiamlerChrysler would be putting the ball in his court rather than making a discriminatory decision.

11:45 AM  

Post a Comment

Subscribe to Post Comments [Atom]

<< Home