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From:
Robert Leeson <[log in to unmask]>
Reply To:
Societies for the History of Economics <[log in to unmask]>
Date:
Wed, 13 Nov 2013 05:43:56 -0800
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"Now if Robert would try to answer for himself, why the labor demand 
curve would shift to the right, following a leftward movement along it 
when the wage rate increases, he might be led to drop that line of his 
inquiry.  [2] Simply put, who buys more of something just because it has 
become more expensive?" [1] 

1. Conspicuous consumption, Veblen goods etc.
2. There is an insightful literature about hysteresis: moving away from the "natural" rate of unemployment (a counterpart to the "natural" rate of interest) has consequences for the stock of human and physical capital and thus changes the "natural" rate (which ceases to look so "natural" or "spontaneous"). Getting one price wrong in 1925 led to disequilibrium in the British labour market - which led to policy-induced deflation (1925-31) - attempts to move down a labour demand curve - a general strike and renewed inter-estate conflict. Fortunately for the British, they were a relatively advanced post-feudal society with a functioning democracy; members of the British neoclassical school attempted to consolidate that advantage. Much of the misdirected nonsense of the General Theory was the result of Keynes' repulsion for the neo-feudal class warfare advocated by labour liquidationist.     

Economic success is partly defined (ceteris paribus; in neoclassical terms) by labour demand curves shifting out. Those who value democracy must think carefully and dispassionately about the costs and benefits of policy-induced movements up and down labour demand curves; those who seek to destroy democracy have no need for such concerns.      

RL

----- Original Message -----
From: "Robert Leeson" <[log in to unmask]>
To: [log in to unmask]
Sent: Wednesday, 13 November, 2013 7:32:42 PM
Subject: Re: [SHOE] Hayek and trade unions

The underlying productivity of the economy - a major source of growth - is a policy-influenced variable: we should consider real unit labour costs, not real wages.  

In countries which emphasise human capital formation, inter-estate conflicts tend to diminish if not evaporate. Economic policy disputes tend to reflect the presence or absence of social homogeneity: Australia has succeeded in part because of the (causal) relationship between civil discourse and 'rational' policy outcomes. (In other countries, inter-estate conflicts dominate: and this is reflected in the tone of the prevailing discourse).

RL


Once again I find myself replying in support of James Ahiakpor. 


In Australia where I was involved in our National Wage Cases on behalf of employers, there was an argument we continually had to deal with which came from the bench and not the unions. It was that raising wages would be good for the economy since it would force businesses to become more capital intensive. The assumption here was that the higher productivity forced on employers would lead to increases in the economy's ability to finance the higher real wage being imposed.


Marginal productivity theory is part of micro and will tell you what an individual firm will do in the face of higher real labour costs. It does not, however, tell you what will happen across the economy. Forcing real wages higher than the underlying productivity of the economy will support will drive some people out of work. This seems to me so obvious that both then and now it leaves me nonplussed to see it even mentioned, but then I, like James, think about these questions using classical forms of analysis. Unfortunately, like Hayek said, it still seems to be a completely new argument to most people.


The only difference between myself and James is that I would send you to Mill rather than Ricardo.

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