On 6/3/08, Eugene Coyle <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > First, my view is that a reduction in working time should be with no loss > in pay. The income distribution in the US, at least, must be (for reasons I > won't get to here) corrected. One step toward that would be a simple one -- > shorter hours with the same pay.
In the abstract, Gene, I agree with you. But practically, for this to happen, enough people have to really want it to happen even without "no loss in pay". Historically, the *slogan* of shorter hours with no loss in pay became the death knell of the union demand for shorter hours. Why? Because it was negotiable for a wage hike with no reduction in hours. Given a choice between more money without a fight and fighting for shorter hours, union members took the money. "With no loss in pay" is a no brainer. Would you like a hot fudge sundae with that, no extra charge? It's all too easy to dismiss the seriousness of people when they are asking for "something for nothing". (Even if that something was rightfully theirs and was taken away from them). What I want to see instead is shorter hours with a productivity-adjusted wage increase. Not on a case-by-case basis. The calculations would be too cumbersome and controversial. But on the basis of broad estimates. Let's say half of an eight-hour weekly reduction in working time would be compensated for in total output by increased hourly productivity. Then the formula would result in a 20% cut in hours and a 12.5% wage increase. That would be, metaphorically speaking, a "revenue neutral" change. Why would I prefer a "complicated" (read unfamiliar) formula to a "simple" slogan? Because its necessary for people to understand what are the underlying economics of the hours of labor and the only way they're going to learn that is by doing the real world calculations. The formula isn't really all that complicated once you understand the principles behind it. For that matter, the slogan of no loss in pay is not as simple as it seems. It actually incorporates the assumption of a 100% productivity offset into its implicit calculation. You don't have to take my word for it. That's the *explicit* rationale given for the standard contract-costing model used by unions to estimate the cost of increased vacation benefits. -- Sandwichman _______________________________________________ pen-l mailing list [email protected] https://lists.csuchico.edu/mailman/listinfo/pen-l
