Business attire might be considered conventionally high status, but it also sets a bounded limit on how good or bad applicants can look.
I agree, it’s not the same as say wearing designer clothes in high school, which would be closer to a prisoner’s dilemma—and in that case one way to enforce “cooperation” is to make wearing a uniform compulsory.
I agree, it’s not the same as say wearing designer clothes in high school, which would be closer to a prisoner’s dilemma—and in that case one way to enforce “cooperation” is to make wearing a uniform compulsory.
(except that it doesn’t achieve the desired results, and makes identification and tracking of status games much harder for people outside of the loop by reducing signal visibility, without diminishing the frequency, intensity, complexity or consequences of the status games in the slightest)
I agree, it’s not the same as say wearing designer clothes in high school, which would be closer to a prisoner’s dilemma—and in that case one way to enforce “cooperation” is to make wearing a uniform compulsory.
(except that it doesn’t achieve the desired results, and makes identification and tracking of status games much harder for people outside of the loop by reducing signal visibility, without diminishing the frequency, intensity, complexity or consequences of the status games in the slightest)