http://ecologicalheadstand.blogspot.com/2014/05/the-sticky-wages-of-sin.html

Sunday, May 11, 2014
The Sticky Wages of Sin

"Only now can one fully understand the effrontery of these apologists." --
Karl Marx, *Capital.*

"Under capitalism, man exploits man. Under communism, it is just the
reverse." -- Polish joke (cited by J. K. Galbraith in *Journey to Poland
and Yugoslavia*, 1958).

David Spencer (2002) and Aaron Pacitti (2011) have each observed
similarities between the efficiency wage explanation for equilibrium
unemployment (Shapiro and Stiglitz, 1984) and Marx's theory of the reserve
industrial 
army<http://econospeak.blogspot.com/p/from-capital-chapter-25-section-3.html>.
"In a sense," writes Spencer, "the debate has come full circle. Marx’s
reserve army of labour, it seems, is alive and well and still operates to
discipline resistant workers."

"Efficiency wage models arrive at the same conclusion," Pacitti argues,
"but for reasons altogether different than those suggested by Marx."
Because the efficiency wage model indicates an inverse relationship between
the unemployment rate and the wage premium needed to discourage shirking,
the hypothesis, "strengthens Marx's conclusion that unemployment will lead
to lower wages, albeit through a different channel."

Both Spencer and Pacitti are critical of the efficiency wage hypothesis, as
are Dean Baker and Mark Weisbrot (1994) and Warren Samuels (1994). Robert
LaJeunesse (2004) cites Samuels's criticism of the asymmetrical treatment
of shirking by the neoclassical mainstream and elaborates on Veblen's more
balanced analysis of sabotage by both management and labor.

Spencer mentions in a footnote the incongruity of earlier economists
viewing *low*wages as a necessary spur to work effort "to combat the
labourer’s high demand for leisure and to maintain labour discipline." He
also mentions in passing that "workers may deliberately slow down the pace
of their work as a defensive
reaction against the threat of unemployment."

<http://3.bp.blogspot.com/-IHYYTyYVmiI/U3A6PzZsLWI/AAAAAAAAA_4/3DP94CRC5F4/s1600/sabotage.jpg>

Spencer neglected to mention, however, that indignation at such
"restriction of output" by workers was a perennial motif of businessmen,
economists and editorialists in their exasperated
denunciations<http://ecologicalheadstand.blogspot.com/2011/05/open-letter-to-paul-krugman.html>
of
a supposed lump-of-labor
fallacy<http://ecologicalheadstand.blogspot.com/2012/07/a-cheap-market-will-always-be-full-of.html>
.

These accusations were the context for Elizabeth Gurley Flynn's I. W. W.
pamphlet, *Sabotage*, that served as an inspiration for Veblen's (1921)
discussion of the "conscientious withdrawal of efficiency" by business.
"Sabotage..." wrote Flynn, "is a very old thing, called by the Scotch 'ca
canny.' All intelligent workers have tried it at some time or other when
they have been compelled to work too hard and too long."

In *The Economics of Unemployment*, John Hobson (1922) gave an unorthodox,
even-handed account of the symmetry of workers' and the employers' versions
of ca'canny:

Behind all these changes and chances of industrial life there lurks the
abiding shadow of an unemployment due to the normal over-supply of
labour-power beyond the current requirements of the market. Workers observe
that, if this full supply is brought into effective use, it leads in a
short time to a congestion of the markets, a fall of prices, a stoppage and
a long period of under-employment. If, therefore, at any ordinary time the
workers in employment were to give out their full productive energy, they
would only expedite this process of congestion and depression. This, I
think, is the underlying economics of 'ca' canny.'

If this labour-economics stood alone, it might be dismissed as shortsighted
partisanship. But put by its side the corresponding doctrine and practice
of employers, embodied in the economics of trusts and combinations. What is
the directly impelling motive for the formation of most of these capitalist
combines? The avoidance of 'cut-throat competition.' And what else is this
than a recognition of a tendency of unregulated capitalism in an industry
to produce goods faster than the market can and does expand to receive
them, at a price adequate to cover costs of production? In other words,
combination for restriction of output is the capitalist alternative to
over-production, congestion and stoppage.

Orthodox economic theory has thus come full circle, from viewing low wages
as a prod to work effort and shirking as a misguided response by workers to
the threat of unemployment to theorizing high wages as an incentive for
work effort and unemployment as an employers' disciplinary device to
discourage shirking. One element has remained constant, though: it is the
workers who are presumed to sin against productivity.

<http://4.bp.blogspot.com/-6wfFnL5D_bw/U3ArNj7d1PI/AAAAAAAAA_o/tkb3hzgUpBE/s1600/Colonel_Blimp_cartoon.png>

Dean Baker and Mark Weisbrot (1994) "The Logic of Contested Exchange."*Journal
of Economic Issues*, 28, pp. 1091–1114.

Elizabeth Gurley Flynn (1916) *Sabotage*. I. W. W.

John A. Hobson (1922) *The Economics of Unemployment*.

Robert M. Lajeunesse (2004)"Keeping Labor Productive: Veblen's notion of
reserve capacity and procyclical productivity analysis." *Journal of
Economic Issues*, 38:3, pp. 611-627.

Aaron Pacitti (2011) "Efficiency Wages, Unemployment, and Labor
Discipline."*Journal
of Business & Economics Research*, 9:3, pp. 1-10.

Warren J. Samuels (1994) "On 'Shirking' and 'Business Sabotage': A
Note." *Journal
of Economic Issues*, 28:4, pp. 1249-1255.

Carl Shapiro and Joseph E. Stiglitz (1984) "Equilibrium Unemployment as a
Worker Discipline Device." *The American Economic Review*, 74:3, pp.
433-444.

David A. Spencer (2002) "Shirking the Issue? Efficiency wages, work
discipline and full employment." *Review of Political Economy*, 14:3,
313-327.

Thorsten Veblen (1921) *The Engineers and the Price System*.
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