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Date: | Fri Mar 31 17:19:18 2006 |
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================== HES POSTING ======================
On Wed, 10 Sep 1997, Bruce Caldwell wrote:
> [Taylor's] study of motivation would have been considered psychology.
> The study of psychology was a rival to the study of (marginal) economic
> theory. So his ideas would have been viewed as representing an
> alternative to economics. (Or maybe even the study of something wholly
> separate from economics.)
> Today, with the emphasis of "mainstream" economics on questions of
> information and incentives, he certainly could be viewed as an
> empirical precursor of the principal-agent approach.
Taylorism, if not Taylor (I know nothing re that historical matter),
concerns *design of the best production process* (pace of work, detailed
motions, etc) as well as *design of a system to induce/enforce the best*
production process, where psychology and information & incentives are
important.
Taylorist time-and-motion study fits marginalist cost-minimization, but in
what respect? F.W. Taylor might say such study is "necessary empirical
counterpart" to marginalist theory. On the economic theorist's side, does
"given a production function" presume that Taylor's work is done?
----Paul
Paul Wendt, Watertown MA
asst.editor, HES e-information services (history of economics)
e-contact, 19th century committee, SABR (baseball research)
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