One difficulty of "debunking" is that people are predisposed to certain
kinds of "supply and demand" "cost/benefit" arguments that are themselves
highly ideological. The scientific pretension of these preconceptions was
discredited in the mid-19th century but they've been recuperated through
carefully coded "simplifying assumptions."

To make a long story short, you're dealing here with the zombie wages-fund
doctrine. That doctrine held -- as a matter of scientific principle, no less
-- that it was impossible to raise wages through combinations of workers or
government legislation. The amount of the wages fund was fixed in the short
run and there was no way to increase the wages of one group of workers
without decreasing the wages of another group or, worse, bankrupting
employers and throwing masses of people out of work.

The basic assumptions of the doctrine were severely criticized by Marx, but
also by William Thornton, whose critique led to John Stuart Mill's recanting
of the doctrine and, eventually, to the development of neo-classical
economics.

But then a funny thing happened. The exact OPPOSITE arguments were used by
anti-union propagandists  to argue to the exact SAME conclusions as before.
Whereas before a legislated or collectively-bargained wage increase would be
bad for workers because the amount of the wages-fund was fixed, now a
legislated or collectively bargained wage increase would be bad for workers
because the amount of the wages-fund WASN'T fixed.

One element is absolutely essential to carrying off this rhetorical bait and
switch: isolating the question of wages from the question of hours of work.
As long as employers can keep people believing they "can't make ends meet"
if they work fewer hours they've got a situation where reducing the wages
can increase the labor supply. This is a condition that violates the "laws"
of supply and demand. Actually, though, it demonstrates how ill-defined and
misleading those laws are -- as Thornton pointed out in the 1860s.


On Mon, May 9, 2011 at 3:54 PM, Louis Proyect <[email protected]> wrote:

> On 5/9/11 6:34 PM, Paul Bartlett wrote:
> >
> >   This study needs a thorough public critique. It would be faster and
> >   most credible if we assemble a group of economists to do so. I am
> >   overloaded with other projects, but could help and do my part.
> >
> >
> >   Living Wage Would Kill Jobs, Cost Billions, Bloomberg Report Claims
> >
> >
> > By Chris Bragg
> >
>
> Speaking of debunking, are there any articles that take up the rightwing
> claim that the top 3 percent of American taxpayers are responsible for
> 46 percent of all the tax revenue? Not exactly sure of the figures but
> this about right. Is there a way to put this into context?
> _______________________________________________
> pen-l mailing list
> [email protected]
> https://lists.csuchico.edu/mailman/listinfo/pen-l
>


-- 
Sandwichman
_______________________________________________
pen-l mailing list
[email protected]
https://lists.csuchico.edu/mailman/listinfo/pen-l

Reply via email to