Thanks, Ben, for further information see my "The "Lump-of-Labor" Case
Against Work-Sharing: Populist Fallacy or Marginalist Throwback?" in
_Working Time: International trends, theory and policy perspectives_, edited
by Lonnie Golden and Deb Figart, Routledge, 2001. Or I will send copies of
the MS Word file on request. I also have a short piece online, "Remembrance
of Work Time Standards Lost" at http://www.straightgoods.com/item439.asp

Gar, I take the comment about being zen as a compliment.

At 02:16 PM 8/8/2002 -0700, Gar Lipow wrote:
>Please be a little less Zen.
>
>What is the "lump of labor" fallacy? Ok no one actually believed it; but
>what is it that no one actually believed.

 From P.A. Samuelson & W.D. Nordhaus, ECONOMICS, 16th edition, Irwin
McGraw-Hill, 1998, p. 239.
The Lump-of-Labor Fallacy

"We close our analysis of wage theory by examining an important fallacy
that often motivates labor market policies. Whenever unemployment is high,
people often think that the solution lies in spreading existing work more
evenly among the labor force. For example, Europe in the 1990s suffered
extremely high unemployment, and many labor leaders and politicians
suggested that the solution was to reduce the workweek so that the same
number of hours would be worked by all the workers. This view -- that the
amount of work to be done is fixed -- is called the lump-of-labor fallacy.

"To begin with, we note the grain of truth in this viewpoint. For a
particular group of workers, with special skills and stuck in one region, a
reduction in the demand for labor may indeed pose a threat to their
incomes. If wages adjust slowly, these workers may face prolonged spells of
unemployment. The lump-of-labor fallacy may look quite real to these
workers.

"But from the point of view of the economy as a whole, the lump-of-labor
argument implies that there is only so much remunerative work to be done,
and this is indeed a fallacy. A careful examination of economic history in
different countries shows that an increase in labor suply can be
accommodated by higher employment, although that increase may require lower
real wages. Similarly, a decrease in the demand for a particular kind of
labor because of technological shifts in an industry can be adapted to --
lower relative wages and migration of labor and capital will eventually
provide new jobs for the displaced workers.

"Work is not a lump that must be shared among the potential workers. Labor
market adjustments can adapt to shifts in the supply and demand for labor
through changes in the real wage and through migrations of labor and
capital. Moreover, in the short run, when wages and prices are sticky, the
adjustment process can be lubricated by appropriate macroeconomic policies."


Tom Walker
604 254 0470

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