I think agents in reflective equilibrium would (almost, but not quite, by definition) not have “morality” in that sense (unsatisfied higher-order desires, though that’s definitely not the local common usage of “morality”) except in some very rare equilibria with higher-order desires to remain inconsistent. However, they might value humans having to work to satisfy their own higher-order desires.
I think agents in reflective equilibrium would (almost, but not quite, by definition) not have “morality” in that sense (unsatisfied higher-order desires, though that’s definitely not the local common usage of “morality”) except in some very rare equilibria with higher-order desires to remain inconsistent. However, they might value humans having to work to satisfy their own higher-order desires.