We need a New May Day !

It's winter in socialism , now, but May Day is on it's way.

Charles

 

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From: Tom Walker

Subject: Re: d-squared wrote:

 

> but one argument that I

> always think ought to get more traction is that

> capitalism has singularly failed to shorten the working

> day. A lot of people intuitively realise that there is

> something wrong here; we were promised robot slaves and

> unlimited leisure time in the comic books, and now the

> space age is here and we're still working like dogs.

Broken record, here. Yes, it's uncanny how the argument doesn't get more

traction. I mentioned yesterday in a post on this thread that a reduction of

U.S. annual hours to approximately European standards could be expected to

generate (or preserve) around 10 million jobs, the same number John Kerry

claims (with less supporting argument) his economic policies would produce

in four years. Kerry's 10 million estimate comes from a memo from Lawrence

Katz who projects that number from the lowering of the unemployment rate to

4.1%. Sounds to me like a tautology: if the unemployment rate drops while

the labour force grows, jobs will be created. That's right up there with

Calvin Coolidge's "When a great many people are unable to find work,

unemployment results."

That same Katz commented some years ago on a Brookings Institute paper about

hours reduction as work sharing. He made a number of sensible background

points but his main point and emphasis was utterly unsubstantiated. He even

produced a pseudo-algebraic 'model' ("the best case scenario for advocates

of work-sharing") that only pertains if one assumes that the given hours of

work are optimal for maximizing output, a condition that has been clearly

demonstrated to be contrary to theory. And, of course, he just had to frame

his discussion with a recital of the "lump-of-output fallacy," Richard

Layard's lame attempt to lend greater terminological precision to the

utterly fraudulent claim of a "lump-of-labour fallacy".

The bottom line for Katz was the conclusion that "there are a number of good

reasons to believe that mandated work-sharing is unlikely to produce much of

a reduction in unemployment." One of those "good reasons" being his

theoretically bankrupt model and the other being the allegedly fallacious

assumption "implicit" in arguments for work-sharing. That, I'm afraid is

what passes for the conventional wisdom in economics on the hours of labour.

 

Tom Walker

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