Yikes.  That got ugly.  I shudder to ask for some clarification as it
seem Eugene is bent on hurling anything that isn't nailed down, but it
seems like both Jim and the Sandwichman (whose real name escapes me,
but who I know has an interest in this issue) agree on a few basic
things:

1. the basically short term nature of cutting working hours, in itself
as a stimulus.

2.  It would be good, in general if all of us had to work less. This
should be a goal, and would be the ultimate goal under a socialist
system, but merely cutting the hours in and of itself is insufficient
over the long term unless there is a socialist system to support it.

Is that about right?

From where I'm sitting it looks like Eugene's basic argument is over
whether a lack of aggregate demand is really the cause of the crisis,
but he isn't necessarily arguing that it might actually be a crisis
based on people working to many hours (although he seems to think
growth in and of itself is not a good goal either, i.e. there is no
crisis): just that any attempt to pin down one of the variables (such
as saying aggregate demand is high or low or just right) is an
entirely relative concept, completely meaningless when shorn from its
overall system of interrelations.  There's some sort of deep
epistemological argument which, while it might be relevant to this
question, seems to me completely tangential.  I'm sure he and Jim go
way back, but I have to say, this little episode of sniping did
absolutely nothing to clarify the issue for me.  Not that this should
be your goal, but since I opened up this can I worms, I just wanted to
thank Jim and the Sandwichman for trying to walk me through it.

In an off the cuff sort of way, I thought it might be a better way of
talking about redistribution: if bankers didn't want us to try to cut
their hourly pay, maybe they'd be better if we simply limited the
number of hours (or days) they could work.  I keep hearing about how
the really big wigs make more in an hour or two than the bulk of the
citizens make in a year.  When there is talk of raising taxes, the
claim is (I believe made by a prominent econ blogger last year) that
they would simply start working less--as if this is some great tragedy
(Oh no! the finance guy isn't working today!)  Well perhaps the better
approach (if only for the purposes of argument) would be to say, "hey
big bankers: take a vacation!)  As you get to a certain income
threshold, you're only allowed to work 7, 6, 5, 4, 3, 2, 1 hour a day
or only a certain number of weeks r days per year.  This would allow
for job sharing between hedge fund managers (you know, so that about
300 people could manage the hedge fund over the course of the
year--just stop in for a day, make their wage [equivalent to the
median US household annual income] and then spend the rest of the year
puttering around the garage with model airplanes or entertaining at
children's parties.)   Most of it's run on computer models now anyway.
 How hard can it be?  Hell, you could probably afford to pay for most
of the job sharers to go to classes in finance for a few weeks before
their day on the job--needing to pay teachers, unless Khan Academy
already has a video on that.  Do this for all the "professions" that
are able to make that kind of money, and eventually you'd go a long
way towards expropriating the expropriators--but you wouldn't take a
dime of their money.

I'm kidding, obviously, (though it could by a witty piece of #OWS
theatre) but it does seem like the idea of work sharing discussed here
is suspiciously focused on low wage blue collar work.  There are
plenty of college grads out there who could probably do a bang up job
shuffling money around (or working as doctors or lawyers or presidents
of the united states) and might like to do it part time for half or a
quarter of the average pay (assuming, of course, they had benefits)
What if all the work sharing was in the upper end of the income
spectrum, but to an ever increasing degree--or better yet, people at
the top had to do some of the work at the bottom as well in order to
get their median wage. It seems like it would go a long way to not
only beginning a kind of redistribution, but also destroying the myths
of the protestant ethic.

On a more serious note, as I write this out, some of it sounds a bit
like what Andre Gorz discusses in first chapters of "the critique of
economic reason," where he talks about "the unequal distribution of
the savings made in working hours [by technological innovation"
because there is, in effect, a dual economy.

"an increasingly large section of the population will continue to be
expelled, or else marginalized, from the sphere of economic
activities, whilst another section will continue to work as much as,
or even more than, it does at present, commanding, as a result of its
performances or aptitudes [he's being generous here, as I was above by
saying the rich work a lot--another reason to destroy that protestant
myth.  Nevertheless, assuming it is true...] ever increasing incomes
and economic powers.  Unwilling to give up part of their work and the
prerogatives and powers that go with their jobs, the members of this
professional elite will only be able to increase their leisure time by
getting third parties to procure their free time for them.  Therefore
they will ask these third parties to do in their place all the things
everyone is capable of doing, particularly all labour referred to as
'reproduction.' And they will purchase services and appliances which
will allow them to save time *EVEN WHEN PRODUCING THESE SERVICES AND
APPLIANCES TAKES MORE TIME THAN THE AVERAGE PERSON WOULD SAVE BY USING
THEM.  They will thus foster the development, across the whole of
society, of activities which have no economic rationality - since the
people performing them have to spend more time doing them than the
people benefiting from them actually save - and which only serve the
private interests of the members of this professional elite, who are
able to purchase time more cheaply than they can sell it personally.
These are the activities performed by SERVANTS, whatever the status of
the people who do them or method of payment used.
[. . . .]
The unequal distribution of work in the economic sphere, coupled with
the unequal distribution of free time created by technical innovation
thus leads to a situation in which one section of the population is
able to buy extra spare time [the rich have to do this because they
are working so much in order to make their indulgent wage] from the
other and the latter is reduced so serving the former." (6)

 I feel it is sort of an unorthodox way of looking at it, but maybe
I'm not familiar enough with orthodoxy.

sean

On Fri, Oct 7, 2011 at 13:16, Jim Devine <[email protected]> wrote:
> Eugene Coyle wrote:
>>        I decided to take a few minutes and reply to your post.  But it is 
>> such a fatuous mess that I was unable to continue with a response.<
>
> I interprete such insults as saying more about the insulter than about
> the insultee.
> --
> Jim Devine /  "Segui il tuo corso, e lascia dir le genti." (Go your
> own way and let people talk.) -- Karl, paraphrasing Dante.
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