Can you have a sustained tight labor market in capitalism?

SLAM: debunk creationism, pseudoscience, and superstitions. Discuss logic and morality.

Moderator: Alyrium Denryle

User avatar
D.Turtle
Jedi Council Member
Posts: 1909
Joined: 2002-07-26 08:08am
Location: Bochum, Germany

Re: Can you have a sustained tight labor market in capitalis

Post by D.Turtle »

Since you apparently missed the point, I'll quote the relevant part I object to:
Everyone being paid more, in and of itself, does not necessarily make anyone better off. If the total amount of goods and services produced is just the same, but everyone's salaries rise, the standard of living is exactly the same. All you did was devalue the dollar, because while everyone earns more, they also have to pay more for everything they want to consume. You only get paid for your own labour; everyone else's you have to pay for.
This is total and complete bullshit, that could only be true if the US economy was a completely closed circuit without growth, trade, debt, credit, etc. In other words, nothing compared to reality.

As a thought exercise, even if everyone worldwide agreed that from now on all wages and prices in the entire world would be multiplied by a 100 - do you think that would have no effect at all on the world economy? (Hint: the value of previous debt would be unchanged)

If your comment doesn't hold true for that extreme scenario, it will obviously not hold true for a less extreme scenario (if only all wages in the US increase).
So it's in our interests that labour is priced in line with productivity, not higher, and obviously not lower either. The free market tends to produce that state of affairs.
Not any more. There is a thread about that here.
Image
German unemployment is presently 8.5%, US 9.7%, France 10.1%. Spain has a staggering 20% unemployment. These figures are current according to wikipedia.

So US has much lower unemployment than dirigiste EU welfare state in the good times, and only about the same as the better performing EU welfare states in the bad times. Not a trade I would go for. And the two things are intimately related: it's the fact that employers in a dirigiste labour market know that they can't respond to recessions (or any other cuts in revenue) by cutting just a few staff, but rather would be forced into bankruptcy, that means they don't employ more people in the good times. It's also obviously a far lesser personal harm to be temporarily unemployed, even for a year or two, than to be a permanent welfare dependent for your whole life.

Now the good news is, US doesn't even have an approximately perfect free market in labour, just less imperfect than EU welfare states, so there is more improvement that can be made.
Wow, lets cherry pick countries and examples. How about Finland, which since 1995 never had an unemployment rate above 6%. Or Austria, which had the same since at least 1993. Or Denmark, which had an unemployment rate of about 3% before the current crisis, during which the unemployment rate rose to a maximum of 7.9% before rapidly dropping down to less than 7% again. All the numbers are from the Labor Force Survey from the International Labor Organization which tries to use equivalent methodology in various countries.

And your comparison of course completely ignored the severity in the downturn in the various economies. In addition, it ignores the standard of living of the employed and unemployed. And lastly puts all blame for a certain unemployment rate on the welfare system (or lack of the same).
And the two things are intimately related: it's the fact that employers in a dirigiste labour market know that they can't respond to recessions (or any other cuts in revenue) by cutting just a few staff, but rather would be forced into bankruptcy, that means they don't employ more people in the good times.
You will of course provide evidence that the bankruptcy rate is lower in the US than in, for example, Germany.
It's also obviously a far lesser personal harm to be temporarily unemployed, even for a year or two, than to be a permanent welfare dependent for your whole life.
Bullshit. For example, losing your health care can and does lead to death.
Now the good news is, US doesn't even have an approximately perfect free market in labour, just less imperfect than EU welfare states, so there is more improvement that can be made.
I agree that there is more improvement to be made in the US - it could maybe someday actually achieve first-world levels of general welfare, freeing its populace from significant risk of bankruptcy or death because of medical problems, giving its populace similar levels of paid vacations and free time as other first-world nations, providing higher chances of social mobility, etc.
HMS Conqueror
Crybaby
Posts: 441
Joined: 2010-05-15 01:57pm

Re: Can you have a sustained tight labor market in capitalis

Post by HMS Conqueror »

D.Turtle wrote:
Everyone being paid more, in and of itself, does not necessarily make anyone better off. If the total amount of goods and services produced is just the same, but everyone's salaries rise, the standard of living is exactly the same. All you did was devalue the dollar, because while everyone earns more, they also have to pay more for everything they want to consume. You only get paid for your own labour; everyone else's you have to pay for.
This is total and complete bullshit, that could only be true if the US economy was a completely closed circuit without growth, trade, debt, credit, etc. In other words, nothing compared to reality.

As a thought exercise, even if everyone worldwide agreed that from now on all wages and prices in the entire world would be multiplied by a 100 - do you think that would have no effect at all on the world economy? (Hint: the value of previous debt would be unchanged)

If your comment doesn't hold true for that extreme scenario, it will obviously not hold true for a less extreme scenario (if only all wages in the US increase).
If the total amount of goods and services produced remains the same, no monetary manipulations can increase the average standard of living, since that is determined by the amount of goods and services available for consumption. There's really no way around this. If you create inflation to reduce the value of the government debt (what you seem to be suggesting), then you are only transferring money from the government's creditors to whoever you give the printed money to (the government, and politically favoured banks, at present), not creating more.
So it's in our interests that labour is priced in line with productivity, not higher, and obviously not lower either. The free market tends to produce that state of affairs.
Not any more. There is a thread about that here.
Image
These graphs seem to be proliferating, but they're extremely misleading. They are obtained by counting only wages and not total compensation (including, eg. healthcare benefits). If you look at non-salary contributions, there are minor fluctuations both above and below, but wages follow productivity more or less exactly:

Image
German unemployment is presently 8.5%, US 9.7%, France 10.1%. Spain has a staggering 20% unemployment. These figures are current according to wikipedia.

So US has much lower unemployment than dirigiste EU welfare state in the good times, and only about the same as the better performing EU welfare states in the bad times. Not a trade I would go for. And the two things are intimately related: it's the fact that employers in a dirigiste labour market know that they can't respond to recessions (or any other cuts in revenue) by cutting just a few staff, but rather would be forced into bankruptcy, that means they don't employ more people in the good times. It's also obviously a far lesser personal harm to be temporarily unemployed, even for a year or two, than to be a permanent welfare dependent for your whole life.

Now the good news is, US doesn't even have an approximately perfect free market in labour, just less imperfect than EU welfare states, so there is more improvement that can be made.
Wow, lets cherry pick countries and examples. How about Finland, which since 1995 never had an unemployment rate above 6%. Or Austria, which had the same since at least 1993. Or Denmark, which had an unemployment rate of about 3% before the current crisis, during which the unemployment rate rose to a maximum of 7.9% before rapidly dropping down to less than 7% again. All the numbers are from the Labor Force Survey from the International Labor Organization which tries to use equivalent methodology in various countries.
Can you link to the actual data, rather than a front page? Wiki has Finland listed as 9%, with the citation being Eurostat. Denmark and Austria don't have especially dirigiste labour markets, the EU not being a terribly homogenous place. My country, UK, actually has a less dirigiste labour market in many ways than the USA. That's why I chose Germany, France and Spain, because they are better examples of dirigiste labour markets, rather than cherry-picking.
And your comparison of course completely ignored the severity in the downturn in the various economies. In addition, it ignores the standard of living of the employed and unemployed. And lastly puts all blame for a certain unemployment rate on the welfare system (or lack of the same).
To be fair, I was talking in general, it was only you who introduced the present financial crisis as apparently evidence that free labour markets perform worse. It turns out that they do not even there. And I clearly didn't put all blame on the welfare state, when we just spent the last couple of paragraphs discussing how I also blame labour market regulations.
And the two things are intimately related: it's the fact that employers in a dirigiste labour market know that they can't respond to recessions (or any other cuts in revenue) by cutting just a few staff, but rather would be forced into bankruptcy, that means they don't employ more people in the good times.
You will of course provide evidence that the bankruptcy rate is lower in the US than in, for example, Germany.
Why would the bankruptcy rate be lower? The German companies hedged against bankruptcy by not employing marginal people in the good times.
It's also obviously a far lesser personal harm to be temporarily unemployed, even for a year or two, than to be a permanent welfare dependent for your whole life.
Bullshit. For example, losing your health care can and does lead to death.[/quote]
The permanently unemployed have no more access to employer-purchase health insurance than the temporarily unemployed; in fact, they lack access for longer. Moreover, universal healthcare isn't incompatible with a free market in labour, if indeed it is desirable.
Now the good news is, US doesn't even have an approximately perfect free market in labour, just less imperfect than EU welfare states, so there is more improvement that can be made.
I agree that there is more improvement to be made in the US - it could maybe someday actually achieve first-world levels of general welfare, freeing its populace from significant risk of bankruptcy or death because of medical problems, giving its populace similar levels of paid vacations and free time as other first-world nations, providing higher chances of social mobility, etc.
US is already about 1/3 richer on average than the EU. US-EU income gap is like the income gap between EU and Russia. Now I do agree on some things (US healthcare system is indeed a mess), but I don't think your proposal to turn US into France or Germany is going to be beneficial overall.
Simon_Jester
Emperor's Hand
Posts: 30165
Joined: 2009-05-23 07:29pm

Re: Can you have a sustained tight labor market in capitalis

Post by Simon_Jester »

HMS Conqueror wrote:Frictional unemployment being higher in free market economies than in planned economies is indicative of a beneficial process: greater fluidity in the labour market, which allows the economy to adapt much better to changing conditions.
That's only true up to a point. High labor fluidity is great for business, and arguably good for the economy as a whole, but it's not good for the workers. It forces them to go through frequent stressful job searches, and because it puts extra pressure on workers to do things like work unpaid overtime in order to not be the ones who get fired. On top of that, high frictional employment can reduce worker efficiency, because a lack of job stability is bad for accumulating experience at a given job, and bad for worker morale.

So at some point the fluidity is simply too high; economic indicators may go up, but an accurate measure of the well-being of people in the country will go down.
Now US, of course, is not any kind of principled capitalist society anyway, more like half-and-half socialist/capitalist (or maybe 1/3 - 2/3 in favour of capitalism, but that's the most one could claim), so lower unemployment might be expected if the labour market were fully liberalised, but the US does very well for unemployment compared to the even more dirigiste western continental european countries.
[blinks]

Exactly what definition of "socialist" are you using, that allows you to claim with a straight face that the US is half socialist? What would a fully capitalist country even look like, under that definition?
So it's in our interests that labour is priced in line with productivity, not higher, and obviously not lower either. The free market tends to produce that state of affairs.
Why do you believe the underlined passage to be true? With high unemployment (frictional or otherwise), the market for labor is very much a buyer's market. An employer has less to lose from not hiring you than you have to lose from not being hired.

Wouldn't you expect the price of labor to wind up being out of line with productivity in that environment, with businesses trying to pay their workers at little as possible for each unit of productivity and exploiting the buyer's market to artificially reduce the price?
HMS Conqueror wrote:Now the good news is, US doesn't even have an approximately perfect free market in labour, just less imperfect than EU welfare states, so there is more improvement that can be made.
Really? What would such 'improvement' look like? What evidence do you have for the belief that it would work? What would such working look like- would we get people who are better off, or would we just get bigger happier numbers from bureaus that publish national economic statistics?
This space dedicated to Vasily Arkhipov
User avatar
D.Turtle
Jedi Council Member
Posts: 1909
Joined: 2002-07-26 08:08am
Location: Bochum, Germany

Re: Can you have a sustained tight labor market in capitalis

Post by D.Turtle »

HMS Conqueror wrote:If the total amount of goods and services produced remains the same, no monetary manipulations can increase the average standard of living, since that is determined by the amount of goods and services available for consumption. There's really no way around this. If you create inflation to reduce the value of the government debt (what you seem to be suggesting), then you are only transferring money from the government's creditors to whoever you give the printed money to (the government, and politically favoured banks, at present), not creating more.
You brought this up in the context of higher wages not leading to a higher standard of living. Since this does not hold true even for the extremely unrealistic scenarios I presented, this will also not be true for a more realistic scenario.
These graphs seem to be proliferating, but they're extremely misleading. They are obtained by counting only wages and not total compensation (including, eg. healthcare benefits). If you look at non-salary contributions, there are minor fluctuations both above and below, but wages follow productivity more or less exactly:
[snip image]
A source for that image/data?
Also, that image only covers data up to 2001 - the difference between wages and productivity in my graph only comes into play after that date.
Can you link to the actual data, rather than a front page?
Sure. Simply click on "Unemployment", choose one of the three datasets, and select the countries etc. you want.
Wiki has Finland listed as 9%, with the citation being Eurostat. Denmark and Austria don't have especially dirigiste labour markets, the EU not being a terribly homogenous place. My country, UK, actually has a less dirigiste labour market in many ways than the USA. That's why I chose Germany, France and Spain, because they are better examples of dirigiste labour markets, rather than cherry-picking.
Ok, how exactly do you choose what country has a "dirigiste labor market" and which ones don't?
If you look at the public sector employment for example(also choosable on the ILO statistics page), France has about 30% of its employed population in the public sector, Germany 14%, Spain 14%, Sweden 34%, the UK 20%, and the US 16%.
Or maybe lets look at the budget expenditure divided by GDP (from the CIA World Factbook): France 56%, Germany 49%, Spain 36%, Sweden 55%, the UK 51%, and the US 24%.
In both Spain doesn't fit the picture.
To be fair, I was talking in general, it was only you who introduced the present financial crisis as apparently evidence that free labour markets perform worse. It turns out that they do not even there. And I clearly didn't put all blame on the welfare state, when we just spent the last couple of paragraphs discussing how I also blame labour market regulations.
Then you will post some comparison of labor market regulations in the various countries and their relation to unemployment. Just a hint: Scandinavian countries are probably among the most regulated/socialist countries.
Why would the bankruptcy rate be lower? The German companies hedged against bankruptcy by not employing marginal people in the good times.
Then why are they now hiring, when the situation is still so unclear that the "hire and fire" capable companies in the US aren't?
The permanently unemployed have no more access to employer-purchase health insurance than the temporarily unemployed; in fact, they lack access for longer.
Only in backward countries (in this respect) like the US that don't have universal healthcare.
Moreover, universal healthcare isn't incompatible with a free market in labour, if indeed it is desirable.
The increased death rate of people with no health care and the risk of medical bankruptcy in countries without universal health care (almost unheard of in Germany, while a significant, if not dominating cause of bankruptcies in the US) make universal health care obviously desirable.
US is already about 1/3 richer on average than the EU. US-EU income gap is like the income gap between EU and Russia. Now I do agree on some things (US healthcare system is indeed a mess), but I don't think your proposal to turn US into France or Germany is going to be beneficial overall.
[/quote][/quote]
What do you get for being supposedly 1/3 richer? You have less free time, less vacations, less job security, lower life expectancy, less social mobility, etc.

Of course, this ignores the question of where that "richness" came from. (Hint: Debt)
Samuel
Sith Marauder
Posts: 4750
Joined: 2008-10-23 11:36am

Re: Can you have a sustained tight labor market in capitalis

Post by Samuel »

Of course, this ignores the question of where that "richness" came from. (Hint: Debt)
He is refering to GDP. Debt finances imports which are a minus for calculating GDP. However the gap between the US and Europe is not like the one between Europe and Russia because Europe is rich enough to provide the basics to all of its citizens and Russia isn't. The increased wealth in the United States does not dramatically increase the standard of living (although it is nice to have).
User avatar
D.Turtle
Jedi Council Member
Posts: 1909
Joined: 2002-07-26 08:08am
Location: Bochum, Germany

Re: Can you have a sustained tight labor market in capitalis

Post by D.Turtle »

Samuel wrote: Debt finances imports which are a minus for calculating GDP.
What?!

Simplistically, at the level of the normal consumer, debt allows me to consume more now at the cost of the interest I have to pay on that debt from that point on.

I don't see how imports play any role in that.

[edit]Well, to a certain extent maybe I could. My impression with economics however, is that debt is one of those poorly understood things on which ideas vary wildly on how exactly it works as to its influence on an economy as a whole - especially in the long run.
HMS Conqueror
Crybaby
Posts: 441
Joined: 2010-05-15 01:57pm

Re: Can you have a sustained tight labor market in capitalis

Post by HMS Conqueror »

Simon_Jester wrote:
HMS Conqueror wrote:Frictional unemployment being higher in free market economies than in planned economies is indicative of a beneficial process: greater fluidity in the labour market, which allows the economy to adapt much better to changing conditions.
That's only true up to a point. High labor fluidity is great for business, and arguably good for the economy as a whole, but it's not good for the workers. It forces them to go through frequent stressful job searches, and because it puts extra pressure on workers to do things like work unpaid overtime in order to not be the ones who get fired. On top of that, high frictional employment can reduce worker efficiency, because a lack of job stability is bad for accumulating experience at a given job, and bad for worker morale.

So at some point the fluidity is simply too high; economic indicators may go up, but an accurate measure of the well-being of people in the country will go down.
The alternative to fluidity isn't that you get all the advantages of fluidity and a job for life; it's rather that you get higher systemic unemployment, poorer growth generally and lower economic levels (ie. your country is poorer at x point in time compared to countries with freer labour markets). And I do stress again that there is no real distinction between "workers" and anyone else. Practically everyone is a "worker", and everyone's wealth ultimately came from work (not entirely true, some came from theft, but it's no longer that economically significant), so if everyone is paid more they also have to pay more for everything. It's like saying it'd always necessarily be better for the food price to be lower, because that means food is cheaper, which is good. This is true only if the market price is lower, due to, for instance, technological improvement. If you reduce the price of food artificially you will get a shortage of food and lack of investment in agriculture. If you hold wages artificially high, you will have commensurate ill-effects, for everyone, not just employers.
Now US, of course, is not any kind of principled capitalist society anyway, more like half-and-half socialist/capitalist (or maybe 1/3 - 2/3 in favour of capitalism, but that's the most one could claim), so lower unemployment might be expected if the labour market were fully liberalised, but the US does very well for unemployment compared to the even more dirigiste western continental european countries.
[blinks]

Exactly what definition of "socialist" are you using, that allows you to claim with a straight face that the US is half socialist? What would a fully capitalist country even look like, under that definition?
It's quite difficult to justify some kind of quantitative thing, I agree, but the US is not just a bit, but extremely far from the free market ideal. The government spends about 50% of GDP, for instance, which is a decent enough place to start quantifying things. Govt spending isn't everything of course, there's also regulation and political interventionism, but that doesn't exactly make the US out to be a model free market country either, with nationalised industries (car making, banks), rampant corruption-fuelled interventionism and rent-seeking, extensive union privilege, etc. The US is probably on balance less socialist than western EU, but only by a little.
So it's in our interests that labour is priced in line with productivity, not higher, and obviously not lower either. The free market tends to produce that state of affairs.
Why do you believe the underlined passage to be true? With high unemployment (frictional or otherwise), the market for labor is very much a buyer's market. An employer has less to lose from not hiring you than you have to lose from not being hired.

Wouldn't you expect the price of labor to wind up being out of line with productivity in that environment, with businesses trying to pay their workers at little as possible for each unit of productivity and exploiting the buyer's market to artificially reduce the price?
No. Workers are trying to charge employers as much as possible for their labour, are they not?
HMS Conqueror wrote:Now the good news is, US doesn't even have an approximately perfect free market in labour, just less imperfect than EU welfare states, so there is more improvement that can be made.
Really? What would such 'improvement' look like? What evidence do you have for the belief that it would work? What would such working look like- would we get people who are better off, or would we just get bigger happier numbers from bureaus that publish national economic statistics?
Union privilege is a big problem in US, for instance, with practices like demarcation, mandatory bargaining, the union shop and licensure requirements that make labour in certain sectors artificially expensive, for the benefit of monopolist cartels of workers who are paid much above the average, largely at the expense of the poor.

As to whether people are better off with lower unemployment, I didn't think this was so controversial as to require citations.






D.Turtle wrote:You brought this up in the context of higher wages not leading to a higher standard of living. Since this does not hold true even for the extremely unrealistic scenarios I presented, this will also not be true for a more realistic scenario.
You didn't show that your scenario would result in a higher standard of living(?).
A source for that image/data?
Also, that image only covers data up to 2001 - the difference between wages and productivity in my graph only comes into play after that date.
Bureau of Labour Statistics. You're right about the dates though, here is a more up to date graph with better citations:

Image
Sure. Simply click on "Unemployment", choose one of the three datasets, and select the countries etc. you want.
Doing this for "# Main statistics (annual): unemployment general level, by age group, by level of education, by economic activity, by occupation " US, Ger, Fra and Spain gives, for 2008 (the latest date they have):

US - 5.8
France - 7.4
Germany - 8.7
Spain - 11.1

So US actually comes out better using this dataset. Using the wiki figures for 2010, US was slightly behind France.

The ILO figures only go up to 2005, so I'm not sure how you obtained figures for recession unemployment. The US still comes out the best from this group, though, with 5.1% unemployment in 2005, compared with the second lowest, 8.9%, from France. Note how the French boom unemployment is about 50% higher than US unemployment at the start of the recession, if the two datasets are in any way comparable.
Ok, how exactly do you choose what country has a "dirigiste labor market" and which ones don't?
If you look at the public sector employment for example(also choosable on the ILO statistics page), France has about 30% of its employed population in the public sector, Germany 14%, Spain 14%, Sweden 34%, the UK 20%, and the US 16%.
Or maybe lets look at the budget expenditure divided by GDP (from the CIA World Factbook): France 56%, Germany 49%, Spain 36%, Sweden 55%, the UK 51%, and the US 24%.
In both Spain doesn't fit the picture.
Dirigiste isn't the same thing as high public sector employment, or govt expenditure (btw, that 24% is Fed Gov only, not total govt expenditure for the US).

There are a lot of factors involved that are difficult to quantify or weight. However, a good broad-brush measure is the Index of Economic Freedom which gives each country a Labour Freedom ranking - http://www.heritage.org/index/Ranking.aspx (nb: they're listed in order of total economic freedom, unfortunately you have to click them individually to get just the labour freedom stat).

You'll notice from this that 'Europe' as a whole is not really comparable with the US because different EU countries score very differently on this measure. Taking some examples:

US - 94.8
Denmark - 93.7 (almost the same! so not surprising that Denmark doesn't have high unemployment)
Austria - 79.1 (again, pretty high)
UK - 72.8
France - 54.7
Spain - 47.3
Finland - 43.8
Germany - 39.9

Spain is actually still a bit of an outlier here, with bad labour freedom but not much worse than countries that have half as much unemployment. I would guess that this is because Spain has been hit doubly: having a poor labour market and also combined with being on the sharp end of the Euro's inflexible monetary and fiscal policy leaving it with deflation to which the labour market isn't allowed to adapt.
Then you will post some comparison of labor market regulations in the various countries and their relation to unemployment. Just a hint: Scandinavian countries are probably among the most regulated/socialist countries.
The only Scandinavian country with low labour freedom and low unemployment is Norway, which is a petrostate. Sweden and Finland have low labour freedom and high unemployment, while Denmark has high labour freedom and low unemployment. Economically denying a connection between regulation of employment and unemployment is really just silly. You can still defend the policies for other reasons, but making something more difficult or expensive (in this case employing people) means you get less of it. That's really all there is to it.
Then why are they now hiring, when the situation is still so unclear that the "hire and fire" capable companies in the US aren't?
They do hire, just not as flexibly as in the US. Moreover, it's the marginal employees they don't hire, ie. the ones they think they might have to get rid of, or would let go first in a squeeze. If you're skilled, educated and respectable, you will probably get a job. If you're a young immigrant (or from an immigrant family) with no skills and you live in France, say hello to 40-50% unemployment. So the poor and vulnerable are actually the most hurt by these policies.
Only in backward countries (in this respect) like the US that don't have universal healthcare.

The increased death rate of people with no health care and the risk of medical bankruptcy in countries without universal health care (almost unheard of in Germany, while a significant, if not dominating cause of bankruptcies in the US) make universal health care obviously desirable.
If you like; I said that to avoid turning this into a UHC debate rather than because I necessarily disagree. What I'm saying is that whether or not a country has UHC has nothing to do with whether it has a free labour market.
What do you get for being supposedly 1/3 richer? You have less free time, less vacations, less job security, lower life expectancy, less social mobility, etc.
Maybe I rather have the money than the free time and job security? In a free economy, I can make that choice. In a dirigiste economy, I cannot. Personally I do not want to work no more than 35 hours per week, like they do in France, despite the best efforts of the EU to force me not to.
Of course, this ignores the question of where that "richness" came from. (Hint: Debt)
Not at all, debt is secured against existing wealth or wealth-producing capacity. Otherwise Africa would be the richest continent on earth!
Simon_Jester
Emperor's Hand
Posts: 30165
Joined: 2009-05-23 07:29pm

Re: Can you have a sustained tight labor market in capitalis

Post by Simon_Jester »

HMS Conqueror wrote:
Simon_Jester wrote:
HMS Conqueror wrote:Frictional unemployment being higher in free market economies than in planned economies is indicative of a beneficial process: greater fluidity in the labour market, which allows the economy to adapt much better to changing conditions.
That's only true up to a point. High labor fluidity is great for business, and arguably good for the economy as a whole, but it's not good for the workers. It forces them to go through frequent stressful job searches, and because it puts extra pressure on workers to do things like work unpaid overtime in order to not be the ones who get fired. On top of that, high frictional employment can reduce worker efficiency, because a lack of job stability is bad for accumulating experience at a given job, and bad for worker morale.

So at some point the fluidity is simply too high; economic indicators may go up, but an accurate measure of the well-being of people in the country will go down.
The alternative to fluidity isn't that you get all the advantages of fluidity and a job for life; it's rather that you get higher systemic unemployment, poorer growth generally and lower economic levels (ie. your country is poorer at x point in time compared to countries with freer labour markets).
That is not an answer. "Your country is poorer;" does that mean you, personally, are worse off?

There has to be a limit. At some point, "fluidity" becomes "churn," with the resulting endless game of Musical Employment Chairs draining the time and energy of the work force. Before you talk about how job fluidity makes the economy more efficient (a claim you have yet to document)... how much efficiency is lost if everyone spends five to ten percent of their time searching for a new job? What happens when they're spending another ten percent on top of that getting up to speed at their new job? It's not realistic to expect workers to be highly productive from day one of their employment.

What are the efficiency and growth costs of corporations systematically firing their work force and re-hiring every time they start to get experienced and settled into their jobs?
And I do stress again that there is no real distinction between "workers" and anyone else. Practically everyone is a "worker", and everyone's wealth ultimately came from work (not entirely true, some came from theft, but it's no longer that economically significant), so if everyone is paid more they also have to pay more for everything. It's like saying it'd always necessarily be better for the food price to be lower, because that means food is cheaper, which is good. This is true only if the market price is lower, due to, for instance, technological improvement. If you reduce the price of food artificially you will get a shortage of food and lack of investment in agriculture. If you hold wages artificially high, you will have commensurate ill-effects, for everyone, not just employers.
What I'm not sure you grasp is that my claim is that wages are artificially low under the status quo. See, this is important: an unregulated free market does not automatically price all goods at what they are worth.

For example, air has more than zero value; try living without it for a minute and you'll see what I mean. In a free market, you pay zero for air, and you pay zero for causing damage to other people's air- goods they need to live. The fact that you pay nothing for it does not mean that it is useless.

Likewise, consider snake oil salesmen- selling worthless (or actively harmful) medicine in exchange for valuable money. The way these guys game the system is by exploiting an information asymmetry: they tell you lies about their product and depend on you believing them. If you believe them, you are tricked into paying far more than the logical price of their product (which would be zero, since the product is useless if not harmful). The fact that you get paid something for it does not mean that it is useful.

Labor is not such an extreme example, but one again there are intrinsic problems with the system that make it impossible to price labor at its true value. The labor market is usually a buyer's market: employers have more freedom to shop around looking for a low price than workers have to shop around looking for someone who will pay a high price. That distorts the market in favor of the purchaser, which in turn tends to depress the price of the goods.

The way to offset this is to reduce the buyer's advantage... which involves reducing unemployment.

This really ought to be Economics 101 stuff, or at most Econ 102: situations in which the naive free-market model has to be replaced with one that takes into account the fact that not all situations are ideal free markets.

Now US, of course, is not any kind of principled capitalist society anyway, more like half-and-half socialist/capitalist (or maybe 1/3 - 2/3 in favour of capitalism, but that's the most one could claim), so lower unemployment might be expected if the labour market were fully liberalised, but the US does very well for unemployment compared to the even more dirigiste western continental european countries.
[blinks]
Exactly what definition of "socialist" are you using, that allows you to claim with a straight face that the US is half socialist? What would a fully capitalist country even look like, under that definition?
It's quite difficult to justify some kind of quantitative thing, I agree...
So... you were lying, then?[/quote]
...but the US is not just a bit, but extremely far from the free market ideal. The government spends about 50% of GDP, for instance, which is a decent enough place to start quantifying things. Govt spending isn't everything of course, there's also regulation and political interventionism, but that doesn't exactly make the US out to be a model free market country either, with nationalised industries (car making, banks), rampant corruption-fuelled interventionism and rent-seeking, extensive union privilege, etc. The US is probably on balance less socialist than western EU, but only by a little.
To pick an obvious example, why is rent-seeking socialist? Why is it not considered a perfectly logical behavior of capitalist actors who are smart enough to realize that they can get huge sums of money by rent-seeking in exchange for tiny sums of campaign donations?

Or to pick another, you're flat lying about the banking industry being nationalized. Nationalized industries don't generally stay under the control of the people who ran them into the ground and touched off nationalization, and they generally aren't in the habit of paying massive bonuses to such.

So honestly, I don't think your argument holds water about the US being "half socialist."

For that matter, what does a fully capitalist country look like? Does one actually exist? If not, then you can conveniently say "in a fully capitalist country bad things wouldn't happen!" because you're talking about Utopia. If so, then we ought to be able to look at this country and see what happens to it; is it actually a desirable place in which to live?
So it's in our interests that labour is priced in line with productivity, not higher, and obviously not lower either. The free market tends to produce that state of affairs.
Why do you believe the underlined passage to be true? With high unemployment (frictional or otherwise), the market for labor is very much a buyer's market. An employer has less to lose from not hiring you than you have to lose from not being hired.

Wouldn't you expect the price of labor to wind up being out of line with productivity in that environment, with businesses trying to pay their workers at little as possible for each unit of productivity and exploiting the buyer's market to artificially reduce the price?
No. Workers are trying to charge employers as much as possible for their labour, are they not?[/quote]So... you think the labor market must not be a buyer's market because... the sellers don't want it to be?

Again, this should be Economics 102 stuff we're talking about here. Workers want to get paid as much as possible for their labor, but then, I want to win the lottery. That doesn't mean I will. Workers want to get paid a lot of money. Employers want to pay very little money. In an ideal fantasy market that cancels out and both sides have to settle on a fair price.

In the real world, employers have more power to set the price than workers, especially when unemployment is high. This is because the consequences of losing a job are worse for the employee than the consequences of losing an employee are for the employer, especially when he can easily hire another one.
HMS Conqueror wrote:Now the good news is, US doesn't even have an approximately perfect free market in labour, just less imperfect than EU welfare states, so there is more improvement that can be made.
Really? What would such 'improvement' look like? What evidence do you have for the belief that it would work? What would such working look like- would we get people who are better off, or would we just get bigger happier numbers from bureaus that publish national economic statistics?
Union privilege is a big problem in US, for instance, with practices like demarcation, mandatory bargaining, the union shop and licensure requirements that make labour in certain sectors artificially expensive, for the benefit of monopolist cartels of workers who are paid much above the average, largely at the expense of the poor.[/quote]Since only a minority of the US workforce operates in unionized sectors, does that mean that we should be seeing fairly priced labor at places like Wal-Mart, where there are no unions?
What do you get for being supposedly 1/3 richer? You have less free time, less vacations, less job security, lower life expectancy, less social mobility, etc.
Maybe I rather have the money than the free time and job security? In a free economy, I can make that choice.[/quote]Expecting to be able to make the choice is foolish: where in America today are you going to find a job that lets you have the kind of employment conditions you see in France? They're not being offered, so you don't have that choice.

You have a choice between living in a society which makes the labor's market into a seller's market (which means that you get better results for your labor, at the price of having to subsidize everyone else getting them), or one that makes it into a buyer's market (which means you get worse results for your labor). You do not have the choice of charging seller's market prices in a buyer's market.
This space dedicated to Vasily Arkhipov
User avatar
Guardsman Bass
Cowardly Codfish
Posts: 9281
Joined: 2002-07-07 12:01am
Location: Beneath the Deepest Sea

Re: Can you have a sustained tight labor market in capitalis

Post by Guardsman Bass »

D.Turtle wrote:Ok, how exactly do you choose what country has a "dirigiste labor market" and which ones don't?
It usually means that Spain, France, and Germany have a number of labor rules and regulations that make it much more difficult to fire employees. That reduces the flexibility of the labor market, making employers more reluctant to hire people. It also tends to create a kind of labor market segmentation, and not in a good way - look at Spain, where you have a large population of young people who are more or less shut out of the labor market.
HMSConqueror wrote:Sweden and Finland have low labour freedom and high unemployment,
That's not true, at least with regards to unemployment. The Finns have an 8.5% unemployment rate, but that's obviously an effect of the downturn - the unemployment rate in 2008 was 6.5%. The Swedes are in a similar boat, with an 8.3% rate in 2009 and 6.2% rate in 2007.

By comparison, the US had a 9.3% rate last year, and a 5.8% rate in 2008.
“It is possible to commit no mistakes and still lose. That is not a weakness. That is life.”
-Jean-Luc Picard


"Men are afraid that women will laugh at them. Women are afraid that men will kill them."
-Margaret Atwood
User avatar
D.Turtle
Jedi Council Member
Posts: 1909
Joined: 2002-07-26 08:08am
Location: Bochum, Germany

Re: Can you have a sustained tight labor market in capitalis

Post by D.Turtle »

HMS Conqueror wrote:You didn't show that your scenario would result in a higher standard of living(?).
Hmm, my sentence was weird (late night ftw)...

That entire segment just seems to be one misunderstanding after another, so I think its better just to drop it.
Bureau of Labour Statistics. You're right about the dates though, here is a more up to date graph with better citations:
[snip img]
Hmm, I found some more supporting what you said: Did wages reflect growth in Productivity? (pdf)
Interesting.
Doing this for "# Main statistics (annual): unemployment general level, by age group, by level of education, by economic activity, by occupation " US, Ger, Fra and Spain gives, for 2008 (the latest date they have):
[snip some stuff]
Look at the monthly statistics (the second one). That has current numbers. And then always use the numbers with "Source: (BA) Labour force survey". They have both a quarterly 3 month average and a monthly survey (for some countries using a 3 month moving average). Those should be the most comparable ones.
Economically denying a connection between regulation of employment and unemployment is really just silly. You can still defend the policies for other reasons, but making something more difficult or expensive (in this case employing people) means you get less of it. That's really all there is to it.
I agree that increased regulation of employment or higher unemployment benefits, etc. increase the "floor" of unemployment. During prolonged downturns (like the current one) this "floor" is pretty much irrelevant.

According to you, a less regulated economy should recover faster (that is the unemployment rate should fall faster) than a more regulated one, as companies are more willing to quickly react to the improvement in the economy.

However this does not hold true. The US recovery in GDP is not reflected in the unemployment rate, while the much smaller German recovery has lead to a large decreases in the unemployment rate (which is now almost, or already, below pre-crisis levels). The same holds true for Sweden. Now it isn't the case in all countries (for example France still has a high unemployment rate), but how do you explain the complete lack of improvement in the US unemployment rate, despite a higher growth in GDP?
If you're skilled, educated and respectable, you will probably get a job. If you're a young immigrant (or from an immigrant family) with no skills and you live in France, say hello to 40-50% unemployment. So the poor and vulnerable are actually the most hurt by these policies.
Oh come on, do I have to quote the American unemployment rates for blacks (especially those with no, or little, education)?
Maybe I rather have the money than the free time and job security? In a free economy, I can make that choice. In a dirigiste economy, I cannot. Personally I do not want to work no more than 35 hours per week, like they do in France, despite the best efforts of the EU to force me not to.
I agree with Simon here, you expect too much available choice on the worker's side.
Not at all, debt is secured against existing wealth or wealth-producing capacity. Otherwise Africa would be the richest continent on earth!
You do realize that third world debt is completely irrelevant in the face of the size of first world debt?

Not all debt is bad - debt that is not invested, but only used to consume is bad.
User avatar
Iosef Cross
Village Idiot
Posts: 541
Joined: 2010-03-01 10:04pm

Re: Can you have a sustained tight labor market in capitalis

Post by Iosef Cross »

Cycloneman wrote:An economy where the number of available workers is about equal to, or less than, the number of available jobs, obviously has many advantages: it reduces unemployment, raises worker's wages, improves worker's rights, etc.
Low unemployment raises worker wages? Quite to the contrary: High wages reduces the demand for labor and increase unemployment. To reduce unemployment you simply reduce wages or you need to reduce the rate of structural change in the economy (i will explain this later).
It seems as though a tight labor market is a great humanitarian boon for the people of a country, but it isn't generally accomplished under capitalism. Can it be? If so, how?
Under capitalism labor is employed to the production of goods for the consumers. Unemployment is the discoordination between the plans to supply labor to the marked made by workers and plans to demand labor made by entrepreneurs. This discoordination is the result of uncertainty about the actual conditions of the market. If uncertainty didn't existe, unemployment wouldn't. But you cannot abolish uncertainty, as it is an integral part of the human condition.

However, you can reduce the degree of uncertainty in the conditions of the labor market by reducing the pace of structural change. Under capitalism the competitive market process continually creates and destroys segments of industry, and employment opportunities are continually created and destroyed. So, if you manage to reduce the degree of competition in the economy, the number of jobs destroyed by creative destruction will be smaller.

I would recommend the adoption of taxes on pure entrepreneurial profits to reduce the pace of change in the economy, but it will reduce economic growth and reduce wages in the long run. Though it can reduce unemployment in the short run.

Also, there the fact that minimum wages and other labor market regulation can make plan coordination in the labor market more difficult. So, to reduce unemployment, desregulamentation of labor markets is a good start.
User avatar
Iosef Cross
Village Idiot
Posts: 541
Joined: 2010-03-01 10:04pm

Re: Can you have a sustained tight labor market in capitalis

Post by Iosef Cross »

HMS Conqueror wrote:
D.Turtle wrote:Not any more. There is a thread about that here.
Image
These graphs seem to be proliferating, but they're extremely misleading. They are obtained by counting only wages and not total compensation (including, eg. healthcare benefits). If you look at non-salary contributions, there are minor fluctuations both above and below, but wages follow productivity more or less exactly:

Image
Yes. It is actually impossible for compensation to greatly diverge for marginal labor productivity in the long run, because the competition between entrepreneurs compete to hire laborers by offering higher wages until the wages reach their productivity levels.

A simple demonstration: If you have two entrepreneurs E1 and E2 and one worker, A, with has a labor productivity of 10. If he receives a current wage of 5, then an entrepreneur will make 5 in profit from employing the worker. If E1 is currently employing the worker, for E2 to capture the worker he will need to offer a wage of 6, and would make a profit of 4. However, the optimal response in the part of E1 will be to raise his wage offer to 7 for the worker. But the optimal response in the part of E2 will be to raise his wage to 8.

Hence, the only Nash equilibrium in this game has the wage at 10 (or at 9.9999...).

However, since there exists uncertainty about the productivity of the worker, wages aren't equal to productivity in the short run and in specific sectors of the economy (specially the new ones). But in the long run the tendency is for the equalization of wages to their productivity, as employer learn about the real productivity of their workers.

If you have a graph where worker productivity growth is different from wages, that can be due to 3 factors:

1- The graph measures a time frame too small to let the market reach an equilibrium. Hence, uncertainty still lies undefeated by the brave entrepreneurs and wages and productivity didn't converge yet.

2- The graph doesn't include the added costs of capital: If worker productivity improves, but the quantity of capital invested per worker increases also, wages can be reduced in proportion of total factor income because the added capital increase the proportion of income that goes to pay for interest on invested capital.

3- The graph is wrong. Like for example, it doesn't measure the costs that aren't counted in wages, as HMS conqueror has pointed out.
Samuel
Sith Marauder
Posts: 4750
Joined: 2008-10-23 11:36am

Re: Can you have a sustained tight labor market in capitalis

Post by Samuel »

Simplistically, at the level of the normal consumer, debt allows me to consume more now at the cost of the interest I have to pay on that debt from that point on.

I don't see how imports play any role in that.
Comsumption is not what he is refering to. He is refering to the fact that the United States has a higher real per capita GDP. Consumption is a component of GDP, but imports is subtracted from it- you cannot raise GDP with imports.
The government spends about 50% of GDP, for instance, which is a decent enough place to start quantifying things.
Normally the government spends about 35% of the GDP.
http://www.usgovernmentspending.com/us_ ... chart.html

It just happens we are in a war and a recession which mess with the indicators.
rampant corruption-fuelled interventionism and rent-seeking, extensive union privilege, etc.
Er, that happens under capitalist economies as well (see the asian tigers for good examples). As for extensive union priviledge... I don't see how that is tied with the state being socialist. Wouldn't the government protecting workers under a socialist programme result in weaker union priviledges as there is less distinction between them and the rest of the workforce?
Union privilege is a big problem in US, for instance, with practices like demarcation, mandatory bargaining, the union shop and licensure requirements that make labour in certain sectors artificially expensive, for the benefit of monopolist cartels of workers who are paid much above the average, largely at the expense of the poor.
According to wiki only 12.4% of workers are in unions... and leaving out the government unions the number falls to 7.6%.

Also unions aren't always at expense of the poor. That only holds true for labor intensive goods were the quantity of labor is the determinant of production. If the product is capital intensive and wages are a small component of costs they won't have as large effect. Of course this requires them to be producing goods consumed by the poor.
Maybe I rather have the money than the free time and job security? In a free economy, I can make that choice. In a dirigiste economy, I cannot. Personally I do not want to work no more than 35 hours per week, like they do in France, despite the best efforts of the EU to force me not to.
No, you don't get to make that choice. If you choose to take the vacation when the next recession comes you lose your job. There is a pressure on all employees to work as much as possible because those that don't will lose their jobs to those who do.
What are the efficiency and growth costs of corporations systematically firing their work force and re-hiring every time they start to get experienced and settled into their jobs?
If they are high enough companies will stop doing it because it is cheaper to keep their employees. Obviously that requires the cost of retraining to be higher than the wages paid during the slow period. That requires expensive training and skill set or one that is rare, not a common occurance.
User avatar
K. A. Pital
Glamorous Commie
Posts: 20813
Joined: 2003-02-26 11:39am
Location: Elysium

Re: Can you have a sustained tight labor market in capitalis

Post by K. A. Pital »

Iosef Cross wrote:But you cannot abolish uncertainty, as it is an integral part of the human condition
You can't abolish it, but you can decrease it. Why is the world black and white in Iosefland? What is an "integral part of human condition"? We can see many things which are ubiqutous and omnipresent in the current economic system. That does not mean they are an "integral part of human condition", they're just a part of the current system. This is a cunning and clever lie - to equate the current system with human nature itself. But that won't do, Iosef. Try better than this.
Iosef Cross wrote:The graph measures a time frame too small to let the market reach an equilibrium.
The alternative is that equilibrium is a theoretical model rarely "reached" in practice. You say it as if the market reaches some point and stops the changes to the labour market prices (or a certain fraction of those).
Iosef Cross wrote:Under capitalism labor is employed to the production of goods for the consumers.
It can also be employed to produce at a minimum substience level if the oligarchs extract a natural rent and live upon natural monopolies as opposed to the production of consumer goods. It's quite possible.
Lì ci sono chiese, macerie, moschee e questure, lì frontiere, prezzi inaccessibile e freddure
Lì paludi, minacce, cecchini coi fucili, documenti, file notturne e clandestini
Qui incontri, lotte, passi sincronizzati, colori, capannelli non autorizzati,
Uccelli migratori, reti, informazioni, piazze di Tutti i like pazze di passioni...

...La tranquillità è importante ma la libertà è tutto!
Assalti Frontali
Cycloneman
Padawan Learner
Posts: 155
Joined: 2007-09-13 09:02pm

Re: Can you have a sustained tight labor market in capitalis

Post by Cycloneman »

Iosef Cross wrote:Low unemployment raises worker wages? Quite to the contrary: High wages reduces the demand for labor and increase unemployment. To reduce unemployment you simply reduce wages or you need to reduce the rate of structural change in the economy (i will explain this later).
What happens if demand is greater than supply? The cost goes up. In this case, the "demand" is for employees, and the "supply" is the labor force. When unemployment is at a low, then the demand for employees is high (otherwise unemployment would not be low). The supply dwindles, and those who are outside of the current labor force can enter back into it far more easily, as there is a great need for workers. Simultaneously, hiring new employees becomes more difficult for the employers, thus allowing unions and similar organizations to have a stronger bargaining position.
Iosef Cross wrote:Under capitalism labor is employed to the production of goods for the consumers.
No... under capitalism, labor is employed by private individuals in enterprises (e.g. corporations) that have a tendency to become larger and larger. What that labor is employed to do has nothing to do with the economic model.
Iosef Cross wrote: Unemployment is the discoordination between the plans to supply labor to the marked made by workers and plans to demand labor made by entrepreneurs. This discoordination is the result of uncertainty about the actual conditions of the market. If uncertainty didn't existe, unemployment wouldn't. But you cannot abolish uncertainty, as it is an integral part of the human condition.
Unemployment is not the result of capitalists guessing how much labor there is to buy and guessing low every time. That's a bit absurd. Firstly, what about when there is obviously more supply than there is demand in the labor market with no likelihood of that changing in the immediate future (for example, now)? Secondly, why would things like an increase in cost of labor increase unemployment, as you suggest later on with your statement that minimum wages increase unemployment?
Everyone being paid more, in and of itself, does not necessarily make anyone better off. If the total amount of goods and services produced is just the same, but everyone's salaries rise, the standard of living is exactly the same. All you did was devalue the dollar, because while everyone earns more, they also have to pay more for everything they want to consume. You only get paid for your own labour; everyone else's you have to pay for.
It isn't "everyone" being paid more; it's workers being paid more.
HMS Conqueror
Crybaby
Posts: 441
Joined: 2010-05-15 01:57pm

Re: Can you have a sustained tight labor market in capitalis

Post by HMS Conqueror »

Simon_Jester wrote:
HMS Conqueror wrote:
Simon_Jester wrote:That's only true up to a point. High labor fluidity is great for business, and arguably good for the economy as a whole, but it's not good for the workers. It forces them to go through frequent stressful job searches, and because it puts extra pressure on workers to do things like work unpaid overtime in order to not be the ones who get fired. On top of that, high frictional employment can reduce worker efficiency, because a lack of job stability is bad for accumulating experience at a given job, and bad for worker morale.

So at some point the fluidity is simply too high; economic indicators may go up, but an accurate measure of the well-being of people in the country will go down.
The alternative to fluidity isn't that you get all the advantages of fluidity and a job for life; it's rather that you get higher systemic unemployment, poorer growth generally and lower economic levels (ie. your country is poorer at x point in time compared to countries with freer labour markets).
That is not an answer. "Your country is poorer;" does that mean you, personally, are worse off?

There has to be a limit. At some point, "fluidity" becomes "churn," with the resulting endless game of Musical Employment Chairs draining the time and energy of the work force. Before you talk about how job fluidity makes the economy more efficient (a claim you have yet to document)... how much efficiency is lost if everyone spends five to ten percent of their time searching for a new job? What happens when they're spending another ten percent on top of that getting up to speed at their new job? It's not realistic to expect workers to be highly productive from day one of their employment.

What are the efficiency and growth costs of corporations systematically firing their work force and re-hiring every time they start to get experienced and settled into their jobs?
I think you've misinterpreted me here. I'm not saying we should artificially make frictional employment has high as possible, by firing people by lottery or something, just that it shouldn't be artificially restricted. So there is no reason to make people redundant until their job is no long productive, at which point it is good to do so for the reasons I've already explained.
And I do stress again that there is no real distinction between "workers" and anyone else. Practically everyone is a "worker", and everyone's wealth ultimately came from work (not entirely true, some came from theft, but it's no longer that economically significant), so if everyone is paid more they also have to pay more for everything. It's like saying it'd always necessarily be better for the food price to be lower, because that means food is cheaper, which is good. This is true only if the market price is lower, due to, for instance, technological improvement. If you reduce the price of food artificially you will get a shortage of food and lack of investment in agriculture. If you hold wages artificially high, you will have commensurate ill-effects, for everyone, not just employers.
What I'm not sure you grasp is that my claim is that wages are artificially low under the status quo. See, this is important: an unregulated free market does not automatically price all goods at what they are worth.

For example, air has more than zero value; try living without it for a minute and you'll see what I mean. In a free market, you pay zero for air, and you pay zero for causing damage to other people's air- goods they need to live. The fact that you pay nothing for it does not mean that it is useless.

Likewise, consider snake oil salesmen- selling worthless (or actively harmful) medicine in exchange for valuable money. The way these guys game the system is by exploiting an information asymmetry: they tell you lies about their product and depend on you believing them. If you believe them, you are tricked into paying far more than the logical price of their product (which would be zero, since the product is useless if not harmful). The fact that you get paid something for it does not mean that it is useful.

Labor is not such an extreme example, but one again there are intrinsic problems with the system that make it impossible to price labor at its true value. The labor market is usually a buyer's market: employers have more freedom to shop around looking for a low price than workers have to shop around looking for someone who will pay a high price. That distorts the market in favor of the purchaser, which in turn tends to depress the price of the goods.

The way to offset this is to reduce the buyer's advantage... which involves reducing unemployment.

This really ought to be Economics 101 stuff, or at most Econ 102: situations in which the naive free-market model has to be replaced with one that takes into account the fact that not all situations are ideal free markets.
Just empirically, the claim you underlined is false, at least on average over time, as the productivity:total compensation graph shows. I don't feel any need to attack explanation for an empirical prediction that we do not observe, but I will say that you would probably have a better understanding market if you didn't take "perfect competition", "perfect information" and other mathematical idealisations too seriously: the point isn't that the market creates a perfect outcome (it doesn't), but that it creates an excellent approximation of one that is continually improved over time.
[blinks]
Exactly what definition of "socialist" are you using, that allows you to claim with a straight face that the US is half socialist? What would a fully capitalist country even look like, under that definition?
It's quite difficult to justify some kind of quantitative thing, I agree...
So... you were lying, then?
No, just fudging. What I mean is that it's fairly meaningless to say that US is "50% socialist" - the exact number would depend on the definition, and many aspects are not quantifiable - but it gives the correct sense of how things are. The US does not have significant economic institutional differences to the EU15, for example.
...but the US is not just a bit, but extremely far from the free market ideal. The government spends about 50% of GDP, for instance, which is a decent enough place to start quantifying things. Govt spending isn't everything of course, there's also regulation and political interventionism, but that doesn't exactly make the US out to be a model free market country either, with nationalised industries (car making, banks), rampant corruption-fuelled interventionism and rent-seeking, extensive union privilege, etc. The US is probably on balance less socialist than western EU, but only by a little.
To pick an obvious example, why is rent-seeking socialist? Why is it not considered a perfectly logical behavior of capitalist actors who are smart enough to realize that they can get huge sums of money by rent-seeking in exchange for tiny sums of campaign donations?

Or to pick another, you're flat lying about the banking industry being nationalized. Nationalized industries don't generally stay under the control of the people who ran them into the ground and touched off nationalization, and they generally aren't in the habit of paying massive bonuses to such.

So honestly, I don't think your argument holds water about the US being "half socialist."

For that matter, what does a fully capitalist country look like? Does one actually exist? If not, then you can conveniently say "in a fully capitalist country bad things wouldn't happen!" because you're talking about Utopia. If so, then we ought to be able to look at this country and see what happens to it; is it actually a desirable place in which to live?
Replace "socialist" with "statist" and "capitalist" with "free market" if you prefer. A fully capitalist (free market) society would be one with no state and laws that only provided restitution (not punishment) for violations of property in material things and one's own person. It would be a particular type of anarchism. It's arguable that 19th century anglosphere (including US, UK, and some parts of the British Empire) approximated this moderately closely, but 2010 USA is very far from it.
Why do you believe the underlined passage to be true? With high unemployment (frictional or otherwise), the market for labor is very much a buyer's market. An employer has less to lose from not hiring you than you have to lose from not being hired.

Wouldn't you expect the price of labor to wind up being out of line with productivity in that environment, with businesses trying to pay their workers at little as possible for each unit of productivity and exploiting the buyer's market to artificially reduce the price?
No. Workers are trying to charge employers as much as possible for their labour, are they not?
So... you think the labor market must not be a buyer's market because... the sellers don't want it to be?

Again, this should be Economics 102 stuff we're talking about here. Workers want to get paid as much as possible for their labor, but then, I want to win the lottery. That doesn't mean I will. Workers want to get paid a lot of money. Employers want to pay very little money. In an ideal fantasy market that cancels out and both sides have to settle on a fair price.

In the real world, employers have more power to set the price than workers, especially when unemployment is high. This is because the consequences of losing a job are worse for the employee than the consequences of losing an employee are for the employer, especially when he can easily hire another one.
Labour is neither a buyer's market nor a seller's market. There are huge numbers of actors both buying and selling labour. Again refer to the graph I posted: it's an empirical fact that wages closely match productivity. You are probably suffering from selection bias here, having presumably spent your entire life selling your labour and not much buying other peoples'. But try to have an extension built on your house, or work done on your car, and tell me that it was an easy matter to bid down the people you employ to subsistence-level wages.
Really? What would such 'improvement' look like? What evidence do you have for the belief that it would work? What would such working look like- would we get people who are better off, or would we just get bigger happier numbers from bureaus that publish national economic statistics?
Union privilege is a big problem in US, for instance, with practices like demarcation, mandatory bargaining, the union shop and licensure requirements that make labour in certain sectors artificially expensive, for the benefit of monopolist cartels of workers who are paid much above the average, largely at the expense of the poor.
Since only a minority of the US workforce operates in unionized sectors, does that mean that we should be seeing fairly priced labor at places like Wal-Mart, where there are no unions?
According to wiki, about an eighth of Americans are unionised. A minority, but a significant one nonetheless.
What do you get for being supposedly 1/3 richer? You have less free time, less vacations, less job security, lower life expectancy, less social mobility, etc.
Maybe I rather have the money than the free time and job security? In a free economy, I can make that choice.
Expecting to be able to make the choice is foolish: where in America today are you going to find a job that lets you have the kind of employment conditions you see in France? They're not being offered, so you don't have that choice.

You have a choice between living in a society which makes the labor's market into a seller's market (which means that you get better results for your labor, at the price of having to subsidize everyone else getting them), or one that makes it into a buyer's market (which means you get worse results for your labor). You do not have the choice of charging seller's market prices in a buyer's market.
Why does the employer even care how many hours you work? They are only interested in your cost to them per hour versus your production per hour. If that's positive for them, it's still in their interest to employ you even for just one hour. That is unusual, because it's inconvenient for most employees, and there are some fixed costs of employing people (many imposed by govt), but more normal part-time working is hardly uncommon.
D.Turtle wrote:Look at the monthly statistics (the second one). That has current numbers. And then always use the numbers with "Source: (BA) Labour force survey". They have both a quarterly 3 month average and a monthly survey (for some countries using a 3 month moving average). Those should be the most comparable ones.
From the latest month.

Germany - 7.4
US - 9.6
France - 9.8
Spain - 20.1

In this the least favourable dataset the US is still only about average for the Western EU (counting Spain as an outlier, though that is perhaps unfair, as Germany has benefited from the EU rate-setting for the same reason as Spain has lost out from it).
I agree that increased regulation of employment or higher unemployment benefits, etc. increase the "floor" of unemployment. During prolonged downturns (like the current one) this "floor" is pretty much irrelevant.

According to you, a less regulated economy should recover faster (that is the unemployment rate should fall faster) than a more regulated one, as companies are more willing to quickly react to the improvement in the economy.

However this does not hold true. The US recovery in GDP is not reflected in the unemployment rate, while the much smaller German recovery has lead to a large decreases in the unemployment rate (which is now almost, or already, below pre-crisis levels). The same holds true for Sweden. Now it isn't the case in all countries (for example France still has a high unemployment rate), but how do you explain the complete lack of improvement in the US unemployment rate, despite a higher growth in GDP?
Unemployment rate shouldn't necessarily fall faster, that would depend upon the rate of recovery. But it should fall to a lower post-recession value, as it has done in the past.

As for the disparate Eurozone recovery rates, as I indicated above I'd suspect the Euro rate-setting is largely responsible. They're a lot better for some countries than for others.
Oh come on, do I have to quote the American unemployment rates for blacks (especially those with no, or little, education)?
It's high, reflecting that US still has, eg. minimum wage, unemployment benefits, etc., but not as high as the French muslim youth unemployment. France has essentially equal rights and franchise, yet it has race riots of the type the US hasn't seen for decades.
You do realize that third world debt is completely irrelevant in the face of the size of first world debt?

Not all debt is bad - debt that is not invested, but only used to consume is bad.
Right: Africa can't borrow first world sums because there is no collateral. First world countries use tax revenue as collateral, which is proportionate to the production of the real economy. So debt doesn't make western countries rich, it just allows fraudulent politicians to buy votes in the present and dump the cost onto subsequent governments. It only moves money around, at considerable expense, and actually reduces overall wealth of a country.
Simon_Jester
Emperor's Hand
Posts: 30165
Joined: 2009-05-23 07:29pm

Re: Can you have a sustained tight labor market in capitalis

Post by Simon_Jester »

HMS Conqueror wrote:
Simon_Jester wrote:There has to be a limit. At some point, "fluidity" becomes "churn," with the resulting endless game of Musical Employment Chairs draining the time and energy of the work force. Before you talk about how job fluidity makes the economy more efficient (a claim you have yet to document)... how much efficiency is lost if everyone spends five to ten percent of their time searching for a new job? What happens when they're spending another ten percent on top of that getting up to speed at their new job? It's not realistic to expect workers to be highly productive from day one of their employment.

What are the efficiency and growth costs of corporations systematically firing their work force and re-hiring every time they start to get experienced and settled into their jobs?
I think you've misinterpreted me here. I'm not saying we should artificially make frictional employment has high as possible, by firing people by lottery or something, just that it shouldn't be artificially restricted. So there is no reason to make people redundant until their job is no long productive, at which point it is good to do so for the reasons I've already explained.
What makes you think that the "natural" rate of frictional unemployment (the one that obtains without it being encouraged or discouraged) is best?

The natural rate of theft is too high; it's better to have laws against theft. The natural level of education is too low; it's better to have public education so you get an educated workforce and so naturally talented members of the lower class can make full use of their talents.

Why shouldn't the natural rate of frictional unemployment be too high or low?
What I'm not sure you grasp is that my claim is that wages are artificially low under the status quo. See, this is important: an unregulated free market does not automatically price all goods at what they are worth...
Just empirically, the claim you underlined is false, at least on average over time, as the productivity:total compensation graph shows.
Explain to me how your graph proves my claim to be false. Even if we accept that worker compensation scales linearly with employee productivity, according to measures of your choice for what compensation and productivity are... that does not prove that employees are being adequately compensated. The fact that I get paid twice as much for producing twice as much does not mean I am being paid the right amount on a per-unit basis.

There isn't a word for what that observation ought to be... "100-level Basic Common Sense in Interpreting Data?"
I don't feel any need to attack explanation for an empirical prediction that we do not observe, but I will say that you would probably have a better understanding market if you didn't take "perfect competition", "perfect information" and other mathematical idealisations too seriously: the point isn't that the market creates a perfect outcome (it doesn't), but that it creates an excellent approximation of one that is continually improved over time.
Can you prove this to be true in the absence of intervention?

I mean, I don't know of any example of a succesful society that applied rigorous pure-market strategies. In all cases, when the market did something society perceived as excessive, it was reined in. What makes you think that isn't a necessary aspect of the system? Maybe a pure free market would lead to disaster without government interventions to keep it from going off the rails.

Or is this just a point of faith for you, an automatic belief in the good intentions of the Market God?
So... you were lying, then?
No, just fudging. What I mean is that it's fairly meaningless to say that US is "50% socialist" - the exact number would depend on the definition, and many aspects are not quantifiable - but it gives the correct sense of how things are. The US does not have significant economic institutional differences to the EU15, for example.
Can you prove this to be true? I mean, your idea of "significant" may include a hell of a lot of selective ignoring of evidence for all I know.
...but the US is not just a bit, but extremely far from the free market ideal. The government spends about 50% of GDP, for instance, which is a decent enough place to start quantifying things. Govt spending isn't everything of course, there's also regulation and political interventionism, but that doesn't exactly make the US out to be a model free market country either, with nationalised industries (car making, banks), rampant corruption-fuelled interventionism and rent-seeking, extensive union privilege, etc. The US is probably on balance less socialist than western EU, but only by a little.
To pick an obvious example, why is rent-seeking socialist? Why is it not considered a perfectly logical behavior of capitalist actors who are smart enough to realize that they can get huge sums of money by rent-seeking in exchange for tiny sums of campaign donations?

Or to pick another, you're flat lying about the banking industry being nationalized. Nationalized industries don't generally stay under the control of the people who ran them into the ground and touched off nationalization, and they generally aren't in the habit of paying massive bonuses to such.

So honestly, I don't think your argument holds water about the US being "half socialist."

For that matter, what does a fully capitalist country look like? Does one actually exist? If not, then you can conveniently say "in a fully capitalist country bad things wouldn't happen!" because you're talking about Utopia. If so, then we ought to be able to look at this country and see what happens to it; is it actually a desirable place in which to live?
Replace "socialist" with "statist" and "capitalist" with "free market" if you prefer. A fully capitalist (free market) society would be one with no state and laws that only provided restitution (not punishment) for violations of property in material things and one's own person. It would be a particular type of anarchism. It's arguable that 19th century anglosphere (including US, UK, and some parts of the British Empire) approximated this moderately closely, but 2010 USA is very far from it.[/quote]Can you prove that a fully capitalist society would be a good place? Victorian Britain wasn't, after all, nor was Gilded Age America.

If not, how do you know how much capitalism is good, and how much is too much? Or is it just an article of faith that the more fully you implement the Market God, the better things get?
No. Workers are trying to charge employers as much as possible for their labour, are they not?
So... you think the labor market must not be a buyer's market because... the sellers don't want it to be?

Again, this should be Economics 102 stuff we're talking about here. Workers want to get paid as much as possible for their labor, but then, I want to win the lottery. That doesn't mean I will. Workers want to get paid a lot of money. Employers want to pay very little money. In an ideal fantasy market that cancels out and both sides have to settle on a fair price.

In the real world, employers have more power to set the price than workers, especially when unemployment is high. This is because the consequences of losing a job are worse for the employee than the consequences of losing an employee are for the employer, especially when he can easily hire another one.
Labour is neither a buyer's market nor a seller's market. There are huge numbers of actors both buying and selling labour. Again refer to the graph I posted: it's an empirical fact that wages closely match productivity. You are probably suffering from selection bias here, having presumably spent your entire life selling your labour and not much buying other peoples'. But try to have an extension built on your house, or work done on your car, and tell me that it was an easy matter to bid down the people you employ to subsistence-level wages.
To subsistence level, no. To below the level that it would be in the optimum interest of society as a whole to see them paid? Yes.

The mere fact that such a large number of people exist who live paycheck to paycheck, who are poor enough that their poverty spawns problems of crime and disease, suggests that some people are low-paid enough that society might well be better off were they paid more.

And to repeat, showing that wages scale linearly with productivity (for some measure of each) does not prove that we're seeing the optimum level of compensation for productivity. This is what I think you're going to have a hard time proving: that the current status quo is in fact best, to the point where any intervention will make it worse.
Since only a minority of the US workforce operates in unionized sectors, does that mean that we should be seeing fairly priced labor at places like Wal-Mart, where there are no unions?
According to wiki, about an eighth of Americans are unionised. A minority, but a significant one nonetheless.
Not a significant one in many industries. Again, is Walmart, which is non-unionized, an example of what you think fairly priced labor looks like in America?
Expecting to be able to make the choice is foolish: where in America today are you going to find a job that lets you have the kind of employment conditions you see in France? They're not being offered, so you don't have that choice.

You have a choice between living in a society which makes the labor's market into a seller's market (which means that you get better results for your labor, at the price of having to subsidize everyone else getting them), or one that makes it into a buyer's market (which means you get worse results for your labor). You do not have the choice of charging seller's market prices in a buyer's market.
Why does the employer even care how many hours you work? They are only interested in your cost to them per hour versus your production per hour. If that's positive for them, it's still in their interest to employ you even for just one hour. That is unusual, because it's inconvenient for most employees, and there are some fixed costs of employing people (many imposed by govt), but more normal part-time working is hardly uncommon.
On the other end of the spectrum, employers have every interest in getting low-wage extra hours out of you: unpaid overtime. Because the costs of employing you for those hours approach zero, while they still get productivity out of you.

And we see exactly that happening in the low-regulated, non-union white collar sectors of the American economy: employees working sixty or eighty hours a week and being miserable about it.
This space dedicated to Vasily Arkhipov
HMS Conqueror
Crybaby
Posts: 441
Joined: 2010-05-15 01:57pm

Re: Can you have a sustained tight labor market in capitalis

Post by HMS Conqueror »

Simon_Jester wrote:What makes you think that the "natural" rate of frictional unemployment (the one that obtains without it being encouraged or discouraged) is best?

The natural rate of theft is too high; it's better to have laws against theft. The natural level of education is too low; it's better to have public education so you get an educated workforce and so naturally talented members of the lower class can make full use of their talents.

Why shouldn't the natural rate of frictional unemployment be too high or low?
Because that mechanism tends to transfer people from jobs that cease to be productive to jobs that become productive, which is the primary benefit of a fluid labour market. An ossified labour market keeps people in unproductive jobs, while a "fluid-ified" (there is no word for it as even statists agree it would be stupid) labour market pointlessly shuffles people between productive jobs creating inconvenience and dead-weight loss for no benefit.
Explain to me how your graph proves my claim to be false. Even if we accept that worker compensation scales linearly with employee productivity, according to measures of your choice for what compensation and productivity are... that does not prove that employees are being adequately compensated. The fact that I get paid twice as much for producing twice as much does not mean I am being paid the right amount on a per-unit basis.

There isn't a word for what that observation ought to be... "100-level Basic Common Sense in Interpreting Data?"
If employers had the sort of monopoly powers over wages that you claim, wages should not rise with productivity, but rather be flat, or even fall, or perhaps follow some crazy pattern that has no obvious relationship to productivity. This should also be true at a given time between professions rather than just over time, btw, ie. accountants and lawyers should not necessarily be paid more than street cleaners, minus training costs. This isn't what we observe; instead we observe what the mainstream economics predicts: that competition produces wages that rise in line with productivity, and approach the highest fraction of total revenues that still allows the business to be a worthwhile investment. Absent interventions, of course, which in reality can be quite numerous, but the approximation still remains fairly good in moderately free market countries such as USA.
I don't feel any need to attack explanation for an empirical prediction that we do not observe, but I will say that you would probably have a better understanding market if you didn't take "perfect competition", "perfect information" and other mathematical idealisations too seriously: the point isn't that the market creates a perfect outcome (it doesn't), but that it creates an excellent approximation of one that is continually improved over time.
Can you prove this to be true in the absence of intervention?

I mean, I don't know of any example of a succesful society that applied rigorous pure-market strategies. In all cases, when the market did something society perceived as excessive, it was reined in. What makes you think that isn't a necessary aspect of the system? Maybe a pure free market would lead to disaster without government interventions to keep it from going off the rails.

Or is this just a point of faith for you, an automatic belief in the good intentions of the Market God?
There are other reasons for authoritarianism and interventionism than those stated in the official propaganda. Personally, I am indeed a quite extreme believer in freedom (an anarchist), but my beliefs are not based on blind faith, no.
Can you prove this to be true? I mean, your idea of "significant" may include a hell of a lot of selective ignoring of evidence for all I know.
It's quite difficult to prove that there arent difference (ie. to prove a negative). I've presented a number of important measures where there aren't huge differences, but you can always complain that I'm possibly ignoring unstated others. Perhaps if you disagree you could give a major institutional difference? The only half-decent one I can think of is healthcare, and even then, Switzerland is a less-dysfunctional implementation of a similar model.
Can you prove that a fully capitalist society would be a good place? Victorian Britain wasn't, after all, nor was Gilded Age America.

If not, how do you know how much capitalism is good, and how much is too much? Or is it just an article of faith that the more fully you implement the Market God, the better things get?
Before we go off-topic, the argument wasn't whether it was a good place, but whether it differs radically from 2010 USA. It does.

As to whether it would be a good place, I certainly think so. Victorian Britain and Gilded Age USA were the envy of their age and living standards were higher than anywhere else in the world and in any previous age. 2010 RL is clearly better, but the institutions are not the only change, we also produce 5x as much. So I would err on the side of that being the major factor, and the institutional changes actually being a negative, although there have been a handful of unambiguously good outcomes (removal of racial legislation in USA, for instance). I support freedom because it is for me a moral imperative. If the outcomes were bad, you could always give up your rights to a commune with others and elect a leader, have redistribution, refuse to deal with outsiders, etc., and thereby gain the supposed benefits of statism. But I and I think most would regard you as a weird cult for doing so.
To subsistence level, no. To below the level that it would be in the optimum interest of society as a whole to see them paid? Yes.

The mere fact that such a large number of people exist who live paycheck to paycheck, who are poor enough that their poverty spawns problems of crime and disease, suggests that some people are low-paid enough that society might well be better off were they paid more.

And to repeat, showing that wages scale linearly with productivity (for some measure of each) does not prove that we're seeing the optimum level of compensation for productivity. This is what I think you're going to have a hard time proving: that the current status quo is in fact best, to the point where any intervention will make it worse.
Please define "the level that it would be in the optimum interest of society as a whole" and explain how I can calculate it. It's important, because I try to be generous, and I need to know how much extra to pay the taxi driver next time I go to the train station.
Not a significant one in many industries. Again, is Walmart, which is non-unionized, an example of what you think fairly priced labor looks like in America?
And yet, a significant one in many other industries.

I don't know a lot about Walmart specifically (I live in UK), but if it's anything like the subsidiary they have here, it seems to be a pretty regular shop chain providing no-skill employment at low wages. Nothing wrong with that.
On the other end of the spectrum, employers have every interest in getting low-wage extra hours out of you: unpaid overtime. Because the costs of employing you for those hours approach zero, while they still get productivity out of you.

And we see exactly that happening in the low-regulated, non-union white collar sectors of the American economy: employees working sixty or eighty hours a week and being miserable about it.
If this "overtime" is unpaid and you get fired if you don't do it, it's not overtime, it's part of your normal working hours and you are dividing your salary by the wrong number of hours to work out your hourly rate. My point is that at an equal real hourly rate, it makes little different to the employer how many hours you work. Presumably you have met at least one person ever in your life who works part time?
Simon_Jester
Emperor's Hand
Posts: 30165
Joined: 2009-05-23 07:29pm

Re: Can you have a sustained tight labor market in capitalis

Post by Simon_Jester »

HMS Conqueror wrote:
Simon_Jester wrote:What makes you think that the "natural" rate of frictional unemployment (the one that obtains without it being encouraged or discouraged) is best?

The natural rate of theft is too high; it's better to have laws against theft. The natural level of education is too low; it's better to have public education so you get an educated workforce and so naturally talented members of the lower class can make full use of their talents.

Why shouldn't the natural rate of frictional unemployment be too high or low?
Because that mechanism tends to transfer people from jobs that cease to be productive to jobs that become productive, which is the primary benefit of a fluid labour market. An ossified labour market keeps people in unproductive jobs, while a "fluid-ified" (there is no word for it as even statists agree it would be stupid) labour market pointlessly shuffles people between productive jobs creating inconvenience and dead-weight loss for no benefit.
So... how do we know that isn't already happening? I mean, your answer sounds like "we know that the natural rate of frictional unemployment is the optimum because that would be stupid." That's not an answer.

Why do you believe that natural market forces will automatically maximize efficiency? Just because each individual employer makes hiring and firing decisions that are efficient for them personally, does that mean that the entire labor market is optimally efficient for everyone, including the interests of the laborers?
Explain to me how your graph proves my claim to be false. Even if we accept that worker compensation scales linearly with employee productivity, according to measures of your choice for what compensation and productivity are... that does not prove that employees are being adequately compensated. The fact that I get paid twice as much for producing twice as much does not mean I am being paid the right amount on a per-unit basis.

There isn't a word for what that observation ought to be... "100-level Basic Common Sense in Interpreting Data?"
If employers had the sort of monopoly powers over wages that you claim, wages should not rise with productivity, but rather be flat, or even fall, or perhaps follow some crazy pattern that has no obvious relationship to productivity...
Why? Why can't labor just be systematically underpriced by an average of, say, 30%? In that case, I still pay twice as much for an employee who works twice as hard, but I'm also still paying him less than he deserves. The fact that you can get twice as much money by producing twice as much does not mean you are adequately paid on a per-unit basis.
This should also be true at a given time between professions rather than just over time, btw, ie. accountants and lawyers should not necessarily be paid more than street cleaners, minus training costs.
What? That's the opposite of true.

See, one of the biggest reasons employers have an edge in hiring is that laborers are fungible- I can replace any given worker with another worker easily. When all the workers are specialists (lawyers) or when certification is required (contractors working on your house) that isn't true: the investment barrier to entry makes it harder to replace one worker with another.

So we should still expect to see specialists getting paid better than non-specialists, because they are harder to replace and thus have a better (or less bad) bargaining position.

Moreover, we should also expect to see that when the supply of specialists in a field increases, the working conditions for workers in that field will decline rapidly towards the low standard of "unskilled labor." And we DO see this, with for example computer programmers, who used to be highly paid and coddled specialists and are now overworked office drones... primarily because it is now so much easier to replace them than it used to be.
This isn't what we observe; instead we observe what the mainstream economics predicts: that competition produces wages that rise in line with productivity, and approach the highest fraction of total revenues that still allows the business to be a worthwhile investment.
You have yet to demonstrate that the latter is true, especially in a rough economy. Do wages rise in line with the highest fraction of total revenue that allows the business to be a worthwhile investment?
There are other reasons for authoritarianism and interventionism than those stated in the official propaganda. Personally, I am indeed a quite extreme believer in freedom (an anarchist), but my beliefs are not based on blind faith, no.
Oh. Fascinating. So, what's your evidence? Your evidence that anarchic or near-anarchic market systems work, and that government interventions to keep the positive-feedback loops in capitalism from blowing up the system?
It's quite difficult to prove that there arent difference (ie. to prove a negative).
If you can't prove that your system would be better than its competitors, perhaps you should not assert that it is better?
Before we go off-topic, the argument wasn't whether it was a good place, but whether it differs radically from 2010 USA. It does.
And yet earlier you were implying that making America more capitalist would improve it, as a nation. Which suggests that you can cite evidence that strongly capitalist societies are better off over the long run than weakly or moderately capitalist societies.

Can you?
Please define "the level that it would be in the optimum interest of society as a whole" and explain how I can calculate it. It's important, because I try to be generous, and I need to know how much extra to pay the taxi driver next time I go to the train station.
It is in the optimum interest of society as a whole for all productively employed citizens (such as taxi drivers) to receive a salary high enough for them to live in the area where they are employed, to pay their share of the care for any dependents they may have*, and to have sufficient disposable income over and above those requirements to save for their future or to better themselves by investing in their own long-term prospects.

*Note that this drops in a welfare state, where individuals have less of a burden of care.
Not a significant one in many industries. Again, is Walmart, which is non-unionized, an example of what you think fairly priced labor looks like in America?
And yet, a significant one in many other industries.

I don't know a lot about Walmart specifically (I live in UK), but if it's anything like the subsidiary they have here, it seems to be a pretty regular shop chain providing no-skill employment at low wages. Nothing wrong with that.
Does that remain true if the wages in question are so low that people are forced to work sixty or seventy hour weeks to sustain themselves in the area? Or if Wal-Mart does its best to avoid having to provide the usual benefits packages to its workers?

How can you know if Wal-Mart has "nothing wrong with it" if you don't know how much it pays or what the standard of living is in the area? And why do you assert that it must be paying adequately without knowing those things?

I can't see a reason for that except in the context of pure faith in the market.
On the other end of the spectrum, employers have every interest in getting low-wage extra hours out of you: unpaid overtime. Because the costs of employing you for those hours approach zero, while they still get productivity out of you.

And we see exactly that happening in the low-regulated, non-union white collar sectors of the American economy: employees working sixty or eighty hours a week and being miserable about it.
If this "overtime" is unpaid and you get fired if you don't do it, it's not overtime, it's part of your normal working hours and you are dividing your salary by the wrong number of hours to work out your hourly rate. My point is that at an equal real hourly rate, it makes little different to the employer how many hours you work. Presumably you have met at least one person ever in your life who works part time?
Even there, this is often not the case. Employers would often rather have two people who work sixty hour weeks than four who work thirty hour weeks, or vice versa, depending on context. For office drone types, the pressure to work many more hours a week can be very intense- to finish projects at rates unrealistically high for a forty hour week, for example.

Is that just a healthy consequence of the system? Should it be legal for employers to demand sixty-hour weeks from their employees without paying them the high overtime fees mandated by current laws? And to threaten these employees with being fired for not agreeing to do so, which works even though supposedly workers ought to be freely moving away from employers who do that... and yet somehow they don't?
This space dedicated to Vasily Arkhipov
HMS Conqueror
Crybaby
Posts: 441
Joined: 2010-05-15 01:57pm

Re: Can you have a sustained tight labor market in capitalis

Post by HMS Conqueror »

Simon_Jester wrote:So... how do we know that isn't already happening? I mean, your answer sounds like "we know that the natural rate of frictional unemployment is the optimum because that would be stupid." That's not an answer.

Why do you believe that natural market forces will automatically maximize efficiency? Just because each individual employer makes hiring and firing decisions that are efficient for them personally, does that mean that the entire labor market is optimally efficient for everyone, including the interests of the laborers?
We know the market level tends to move people from unproductive jobs to productive jobs and not produce wasteful "churning" because the incentives reward that. That's why you rarely hear about competent doctors or plumbers getting fired, instead it's people working in borderline obsolete industries like journalism, or dysfunctional parts of useful industries, like the Big Three.
Why? Why can't labor just be systematically underpriced by an average of, say, 30%? In that case, I still pay twice as much for an employee who works twice as hard, but I'm also still paying him less than he deserves. The fact that you can get twice as much money by producing twice as much does not mean you are adequately paid on a per-unit basis.
Because the prediction of absence of bargaining power is either weaker or no connection between wages and productivity. Ie. an employer can implement technological improvements and still pay everyone the same, because they cannot go elsewhere. It doesn't predict a constant lower level that rises in line with productivity.

These 'levels' are determined not by labour freedom, but by investment freedom, &c. Capital will tend to be directed at any industry with unusually high returns, until it become saturated to the point where it no longer has unusually high returns. Of course, the 'usual' level varies between industries because some are riskier than others, but the capital competition lowers the return on investment to close to the risk premium and not higher. Whether this theory matches the reality is harder to show with just a single graph for that reason, but we can take some illustrative examples. For instance, you chose Walmart as a particularly labour-exploitative company. Let's see if it has high returns? The answer is no, it makes about 3-4% net profit on revenue, which is a low yield even for a AAA bond, and not all of that will be returned as dividend. Its price to earnings ratio are also consistent with a fairly low risk, large business. Walmart doesn't make megaprofit by squeezing its employees; in fact it operates on quite low margins, and its employees are low paid because they just don't contribute a lot of value.
What? That's the opposite of true.

See, one of the biggest reasons employers have an edge in hiring is that laborers are fungible- I can replace any given worker with another worker easily. When all the workers are specialists (lawyers) or when certification is required (contractors working on your house) that isn't true: the investment barrier to entry makes it harder to replace one worker with another.

So we should still expect to see specialists getting paid better than non-specialists, because they are harder to replace and thus have a better (or less bad) bargaining position.

Moreover, we should also expect to see that when the supply of specialists in a field increases, the working conditions for workers in that field will decline rapidly towards the low standard of "unskilled labor." And we DO see this, with for example computer programmers, who used to be highly paid and coddled specialists and are now overworked office drones... primarily because it is now so much easier to replace them than it used to be.
In other words, you accept the mainstream competition theory that I'm arguing for. But you clearly think there is some magical barrier that is crossed when you gain skills. There isn't. Your productivity goes up, so you can command a higher salary. That's it. The low paid jobs are still competitive, they just don't produce a whole lot, so the limit to how high companies will bid for labour is commensurately lower.
There are other reasons for authoritarianism and interventionism than those stated in the official propaganda. Personally, I am indeed a quite extreme believer in freedom (an anarchist), but my beliefs are not based on blind faith, no.
Oh. Fascinating. So, what's your evidence? Your evidence that anarchic or near-anarchic market systems work, and that government interventions to keep the positive-feedback loops in capitalism from blowing up the system?
Evidence that I believe that, or what? It would be quite difficult to justify my entire political philosophy in just a few lines. I might make a thread about it sometime, but not tonight.
It's quite difficult to prove that there arent difference (ie. to prove a negative).
If you can't prove that your system would be better than its competitors, perhaps you should not assert that it is better?
This is about whether US is economically institutionally different to EU, not whether my 'system' is better than some other system. I'm arguing that it isn't.
Before we go off-topic, the argument wasn't whether it was a good place, but whether it differs radically from 2010 USA. It does.
And yet earlier you were implying that making America more capitalist would improve it, as a nation. Which suggests that you can cite evidence that strongly capitalist societies are better off over the long run than weakly or moderately capitalist societies.

Can you?
In a different quote-line I was saying that, which is why I said to prevent going off-topic. You seemed to be arguing that the US was quite close to the free market ideal, which it isn't, and that is what I was arguing against. I am using pretty much the entire rest of the debate to argue that free markets are preferable to statism, so I think it's unfair to attack me for not doing this even when it's not relevant to the discussion.
Please define "the level that it would be in the optimum interest of society as a whole" and explain how I can calculate it. It's important, because I try to be generous, and I need to know how much extra to pay the taxi driver next time I go to the train station.
It is in the optimum interest of society as a whole for all productively employed citizens (such as taxi drivers) to receive a salary high enough for them to live in the area where they are employed, to pay their share of the care for any dependents they may have*, and to have sufficient disposable income over and above those requirements to save for their future or to better themselves by investing in their own long-term prospects.

*Note that this drops in a welfare state, where individuals have less of a burden of care.
Ah, but my own salary is zero (I live on student loans). So does this mean he owes me money? Well, maybe that's a strawman, but at the very least he should give me a discount, as I'm poorer than him. Not only does he have an income, but he has fixed capital (a cab) and probably a state license of some sort that makes him part of the taxi cartel and allows him to push up prices. I have none of these things! What's more, because of where my university is situated I live in an expensive area (in a box room, admittedly), so he owes me even more of a discount than if he was carrying an old lady who lives in a low-income neighbourhood.

I do worry about this system, though. By divorcing the amount owed from the actual value produced you seem to introduce a fatal problem: if I owe him the same as or less than the market rate, then there is no difference, but if I owe him more than the market rate, then I can simply decline to purchase his services at all. Now you're in the socialist's classic fix: either you accept this, and the result is crippling unemployment for the poor, worsening all social problems and inequality in every way, or you must somehow force me to purchase his services, even if you don't know how I would have acted if everything were sold at the market rate, which requires a command economy. Historically the democratic West has chosen moderate amounts of option #1. The Soviet Bloc, Maoist China, etc. chose option #2. But neither are terribly appealing, are they? What's more, both violate the generally accepted right to free contract.
Does that remain true if the wages in question are so low that people are forced to work sixty or seventy hour weeks to sustain themselves in the area? Or if Wal-Mart does its best to avoid having to provide the usual benefits packages to its workers?

How can you know if Wal-Mart has "nothing wrong with it" if you don't know how much it pays or what the standard of living is in the area? And why do you assert that it must be paying adequately without knowing those things?

I can't see a reason for that except in the context of pure faith in the market.
Someone in my family used to work for Asda [British Walmart subsidiary], part time. There were none of the problems you describe. It was a low paid job, of course, but why shouldn't it be? It is also a low productivity job. Walmart and its customers do not owe anyone else a living. People working 70 hours per week to support their family is of course regrettable, but only compared to working less and still supporting their family. Making it illegal to work more than 35 hours just means they can't make enough money to do so, not that they will be paid 2x as much per hour for the same work (which would be equivalent to a modestly skilled worker's salary).
Even there, this is often not the case. Employers would often rather have two people who work sixty hour weeks than four who work thirty hour weeks, or vice versa, depending on context. For office drone types, the pressure to work many more hours a week can be very intense- to finish projects at rates unrealistically high for a forty hour week, for example.

Is that just a healthy consequence of the system? Should it be legal for employers to demand sixty-hour weeks from their employees without paying them the high overtime fees mandated by current laws? And to threaten these employees with being fired for not agreeing to do so, which works even though supposedly workers ought to be freely moving away from employers who do that... and yet somehow they don't?
Many high-income workers also work like that. In fact, most do (so the hourly rates of the really top jobs are not often as awesome as the name-plate salary suggests, though they are still good). Wherever the work objective is completing X tasks rather than turning a handle for X hours, it does matter if you 'finish the project' on time, not just put in the hours. If everyone goes home at 5pm on a Friday regardless of whether they've delivered whatever the client wants, the company will lose in competition with what that does what the client wants on time. Of course, if you really do want pay-by-the-hour drudgery you can do that; you can even do it online, or so I am told, but the better jobs, even mid tier, don't work like that. The problem here is rather the mandatory overtime laws: sometimes the overtime isn't worth 1.5x (or whatever ratio). Sometimes the employer wants to contract you complete tasks, not to grind through a certain number of hours of dubious productivity (in the UK, builders are often allowed to go home when they've done the day's tasks, even if it's hours before the nominal end of the working day). Sometimes the number of 'official' working hours has to be flexible to respond to the actual workload. So overtime should be left as a contractual matter.
Simon_Jester
Emperor's Hand
Posts: 30165
Joined: 2009-05-23 07:29pm

Re: Can you have a sustained tight labor market in capitalis

Post by Simon_Jester »

HMS Conqueror wrote:We know the market level tends to move people from unproductive jobs to productive jobs and not produce wasteful "churning" because the incentives reward that. That's why you rarely hear about competent doctors or plumbers getting fired, instead it's people working in borderline obsolete industries like journalism, or dysfunctional parts of useful industries, like the Big Three.
So where does that put us at times when corporations are doing massive reductions in force, like now? Why are you so confident that the incentives do reward only non-wasteful firing, that you won't see executives firing people based on perverse incentives like the desire to boost stock prices in a bad quarter regardless of what it does for the company in the long term?
Why? Why can't labor just be systematically underpriced by an average of, say, 30%? In that case, I still pay twice as much for an employee who works twice as hard, but I'm also still paying him less than he deserves. The fact that you can get twice as much money by producing twice as much does not mean you are adequately paid on a per-unit basis.
Because the prediction of absence of bargaining power is either weaker or no connection between wages and productivity. Ie. an employer can implement technological improvements and still pay everyone the same, because they cannot go elsewhere. It doesn't predict a constant lower level that rises in line with productivity.
Why not? All I see linear scaling proving is that at best I have to pay you twice as much to get you to do twice as much, on average. Without separating out productivity and wages by industry, by income (it's possible for average wages to remain constant as a function of productivity when only the managers are getting meaningful raises), and without dissecting what a given unit of productivity entails and how much people are paying for it, you don't know what the scaling constant is between productivity and wages.

Without knowing the constant, there is no way to know whether workers are being underpaid except by taking it on faith that they are not, because 'that would be silly.'

Except perverse incentive structures are not silly; they are a routine part of all economies, market and command alike. That's how monopolies are born even though they lead to price gouging. That's how snake oil salesmen survive and thrive even though they are selling a product of zero utility and therefore zero value. That's how we wound up with absurdly overleveraged banks.

I think you're being awfully quick here to rule out the possibility of a perverse incentive structure, because that would imply a need for someone to step in to do something about it.
These 'levels' are determined not by labour freedom, but by investment freedom, &c. Capital will tend to be directed at any industry with unusually high returns, until it become saturated to the point where it no longer has unusually high returns.
Excepting, of course, industries where the returns are not easily collectible (national defense), and bearing in mind that industries may have exceptionally high returns because of a bubble...
For instance, you chose Walmart as a particularly labour-exploitative company. Let's see if it has high returns? The answer is no, it makes about 3-4% net profit on revenue, which is a low yield even for a AAA bond, and not all of that will be returned as dividend. Its price to earnings ratio are also consistent with a fairly low risk, large business. Walmart doesn't make megaprofit by squeezing its employees; in fact it operates on quite low margins, and its employees are low paid because they just don't contribute a lot of value.
But we could equally well turn that around: Wal-Mart charges the lowest possible wages in order to charge the lowest possible prices. In consequence they can outbid virtually any other retailer who doesn't duplicate their methods.

Is that a net good or not? If the retail sector were a relatively insignificant one to the overall economy, probably yes- having a handful of very low-paying jobs in a large community of people who do something else, in exchange for letting the rest of the community buy more and better goods at lower prices, would work.

But in modern America this is not the case; many people depend on retail jobs to earn a living. And the practical consequence of supplanting a high-wage model with a low-wage one is that while abstract measures of economic efficiency may have improved, you also wind up with a relatively poor lower class- forcing them to work more hours a week to stay above water, and limiting their prospects to advance out of the situation they are in.

Whether the US is better off for switching to this retail model cannot be answered just by saying that Wal-Mart's profit margins are low.

In other words, you accept the mainstream competition theory that I'm arguing for. But you clearly think there is some magical barrier that is crossed when you gain skills. There isn't. Your productivity goes up, so you can command a higher salary. That's it. The low paid jobs are still competitive, they just don't produce a whole lot, so the limit to how high companies will bid for labour is commensurately lower.
The mainstream competition theory works IF you incorporate the nonlinear effects of buyers' and sellers' markets. Commodity prices skyrocket in a seller's market (see what happens to the prices of essential goods immediately after a natural disaster) and plummet in a buyer's market (see the effects of monopolies).

As long as there is a relative symmetry in the positions of buyer and seller, market forces work fairly well at producing an outcome society can live with, that will have no disastrous consequences. When the two positions become asymmetric, that model breaks down. Sellers who have more information about their product than the buyer can cheat the buyer; buyers who have the option of not choosing to buy can extract much lower prices from sellers for whom making the sale is a matter of life and death.

That kind of inequality can be induced by intervention in the market (force buyers to buy whether they like it or not, and sellers can jack up prices), but it can also be induced by non-government forces acting on the market (arbitrary discrimination against certain types of customers, incentive structures for CEOs that favor laying off workers to boost stock prices over the long term viability of the company).

Once inequalities distort the market, we start getting marked instabilities in the price of the good being bought and sold, and/or prices reaching levels that lose touch with the public interest. Ideally and over the extreme long term the market should self-correct, but there are often consequences of market instability that the market cannot take into account- such as a generation of children growing up undereducated because of the hardscrabble life led by their parents. This can impair the market-oriented society's ability to recover from economic crises that would otherwise be a mere hiccup.
There are other reasons for authoritarianism and interventionism than those stated in the official propaganda. Personally, I am indeed a quite extreme believer in freedom (an anarchist), but my beliefs are not based on blind faith, no.
Oh. Fascinating. So, what's your evidence? Your evidence that anarchic or near-anarchic market systems work, and that government interventions to keep the positive-feedback loops in capitalism from blowing up the system?
Evidence that I believe that, or what? It would be quite difficult to justify my entire political philosophy in just a few lines. I might make a thread about it sometime, but not tonight.
I for one am eagerly awaiting it, because it seems to underly your entire position: the market can not be worse than other alternatives because... something. I for one would like to know what "something" is.
And yet earlier you were implying that making America more capitalist would improve it, as a nation. Which suggests that you can cite evidence that strongly capitalist societies are better off over the long run than weakly or moderately capitalist societies.

Can you?
In a different quote-line I was saying that, which is why I said to prevent going off-topic. You seemed to be arguing that the US was quite close to the free market ideal, which it isn't, and that is what I was arguing against. I am using pretty much the entire rest of the debate to argue that free markets are preferable to statism, so I think it's unfair to attack me for not doing this even when it's not relevant to the discussion.
I'm not sure I follow the difference. See, if markets are preferable to statism, then one would expect making societies more market-oriented and less state-oriented would leave them better off. Which, as I said: "suggests that you can cite evidence that strongly capitalist societies are better off over the long run than weakly or moderately capitalist societies.

Can you?"
Ah, but my own salary is zero (I live on student loans). So does this mean he owes me money? Well, maybe that's a strawman, but at the very least he should give me a discount, as I'm poorer than him. Not only does he have an income, but he has fixed capital (a cab) and probably a state license of some sort that makes him part of the taxi cartel and allows him to push up prices. I have none of these things! What's more, because of where my university is situated I live in an expensive area (in a box room, admittedly), so he owes me even more of a discount than if he was carrying an old lady who lives in a low-income neighbourhood.

I do worry about this system, though. By divorcing the amount owed from the actual value produced you seem to introduce a fatal problem: if I owe him the same as or less than the market rate, then there is no difference, but if I owe him more than the market rate, then I can simply decline to purchase his services at all. Now you're in the socialist's classic fix: either you accept this, and the result is crippling unemployment for the poor, worsening all social problems and inequality in every way, or you must somehow force me to purchase his services, even if you don't know how I would have acted if everything were sold at the market rate, which requires a command economy. Historically the democratic West has chosen moderate amounts of option #1. The Soviet Bloc, Maoist China, etc. chose option #2. But neither are terribly appealing, are they? What's more, both violate the generally accepted right to free contract.
With respect to the first, the problem tends to be resolved fairly easily in a welfare state, where having 5% to 10% of the population systematically unemployed at one time works because the remainder who can be profitably employed are taxed to support that fraction. It is only in systems where the unemployed are forced to turn towards crime and permanent underclass status (for reasons racial as in France or reasons economic as in the US) that systematic unemployment is a disastrous problem.

Which leaves us with two self-consistent systems: a laissez-faire system in which the least employable citizens must somehow find a way to survive in a society that charges a flat fee for the privilege of surviving, or a welfare system in which the least employable citizens are supported by the state at cost to everyone else. We are then left to ask which system works better. Economic indicators are supposedly better in societies that do the former, while social indicators are generally better in the latter. Which is more important?

With respect to the second, can you demonstrate that this sort of forced consumption of artificially labor-intensive goods and services was in fact a major part of the Soviet and Maoist economies?
Someone in my family used to work for Asda [British Walmart subsidiary], part time. There were none of the problems you describe. It was a low paid job, of course, but why shouldn't it be? It is also a low productivity job. Walmart and its customers do not owe anyone else a living.
Here we see the core of our disagreement. I would argue that an unregulated market is empirically bad because of the people who do not find a living, or find it only under conditions of relatively great suffering in an economy that could relieve this suffering with a trivial fraction of its resources.

You argue that this is not a bad thing because these people are not owed a living.

There is a fundamental incompatibility of attitudes here: I'm interested in the empirical outcome of the system and whether it is good or bad, not on whether I or anyone else "owes" anyone anything. A system that yields bad results is not working and should not be emulated.
Many high-income workers also work like that. In fact, most do (so the hourly rates of the really top jobs are not often as awesome as the name-plate salary suggests, though they are still good). Wherever the work objective is completing X tasks rather than turning a handle for X hours, it does matter if you 'finish the project' on time, not just put in the hours. If everyone goes home at 5pm on a Friday regardless of whether they've delivered whatever the client wants, the company will lose in competition with what that does what the client wants on time. Of course, if you really do want pay-by-the-hour drudgery you can do that; you can even do it online, or so I am told, but the better jobs, even mid tier, don't work like that. The problem here is rather the mandatory overtime laws: sometimes the overtime isn't worth 1.5x (or whatever ratio). Sometimes the employer wants to contract you complete tasks, not to grind through a certain number of hours of dubious productivity (in the UK, builders are often allowed to go home when they've done the day's tasks, even if it's hours before the nominal end of the working day). Sometimes the number of 'official' working hours has to be flexible to respond to the actual workload. So overtime should be left as a contractual matter.
Which predictably leads to what amounts to a flat contractual salary (you are paid X dollars a week for your labor) being paid for an amount of work left up to the employer... the fault in which system becomes obvious the moment you stop trusting your boss to act in your best interests.
This space dedicated to Vasily Arkhipov
User avatar
Iosef Cross
Village Idiot
Posts: 541
Joined: 2010-03-01 10:04pm

Re: Can you have a sustained tight labor market in capitalis

Post by Iosef Cross »

Stas Bush wrote:
Iosef Cross wrote:But you cannot abolish uncertainty, as it is an integral part of the human condition
You can't abolish it, but you can decrease it. Why is the world black and white in Iosefland?
Did you read the rest of my post? You don't need to be so
What is an "integral part of human condition"?
Because the world is more complex than what your brain can fully understand. Uncertainty exists when the model that your brain uses to act in the world is not perfect and errors in your action plan are made. In that case, unemployment will exist in labor markets.

That's because people make action plans were they offer their labor in return for money. Since their mental models that they used to make their labor offer plans are imperfect, their plans to offer their labor will be wrong from time to time. And when they are wrong, and they fail to get somebody to accept the terms of employment that they were expecting, since their expectations were based on a imperfect model of the world that they live in.
We can see many things which are ubiqutous and omnipresent in the current economic system. That does not mean they are an "integral part of human condition", they're just a part of the current system.
The system based on the cooperation under the division of labor. You can abolish unemployment if people stop trying to get employed. :lol:

In feudal Europe there wasn't unemployment. In that case there wasn't labor markets and people didn't offer their labor in the market. However, if you have a system based on millions of people offering their labor for sale, some offer plans are bound to be proven wrong and unemployment will arise.
This is a cunning and clever lie - to equate the current system with human nature itself. But that won't do, Iosef. Try better than this.
That's not a lie.

That's reality: if you have millions of people trying to sell something, a proportion of this set of sellers will fail in their plans to offer that something. Failure is part of human nature.

The dream of the socialist society, where people will never have problems in their lives, like the difficult of finding a job, is actually a rejection of reality.
Iosef Cross wrote:The graph measures a time frame too small to let the market reach an equilibrium.
The alternative is that equilibrium is a theoretical model rarely "reached" in practice. You say it as if the market reaches some point and stops the changes to the labour market prices (or a certain fraction of those).
In equilibrium you can have changes in prices over time. However, in equilibrium, all changes are foreseen. In equilibrium you cannot have discrepancies between
Iosef Cross wrote:Under capitalism labor is employed to the production of goods for the consumers.
It can also be employed to produce at a minimum substience level if the oligarchs extract a natural rent and live upon natural monopolies as opposed to the production of consumer goods. It's quite possible.
:banghead:

There are problems with your statements that would take years of study to correct. You example is a case of monopsony (not monopoly) in a highly restricted model that doesn't exist in reality, unless the monopsony is protected or is the government.

Anyway, the fact is that people are employed because entrepreneurs wish to buy their labor so that they could make goods and sell these goods for the consumers. That includes the case of monopsony.

Also, the fact is that if you have 2 entrepreneurs and both have enough information about the productivity of labor of a certain individual, that individual will not earn subsistence wages, he will earn the full product of his labor. Also, if that individual is smart enough, he would be an entrepreneur and sell the product of his labor directly in the market.
User avatar
Iosef Cross
Village Idiot
Posts: 541
Joined: 2010-03-01 10:04pm

Re: Can you have a sustained tight labor market in capitalis

Post by Iosef Cross »

Cycloneman wrote:
Iosef Cross wrote:Low unemployment raises worker wages? Quite to the contrary: High wages reduces the demand for labor and increase unemployment. To reduce unemployment you simply reduce wages or you need to reduce the rate of structural change in the economy (i will explain this later).
What happens if demand is greater than supply? The cost goes up. In this case, the "demand" is for employees, and the "supply" is the labor force. When unemployment is at a low, then the demand for employees is high (otherwise unemployment would not be low). The supply dwindles, and those who are outside of the current labor force can enter back into it far more easily, as there is a great need for workers. Simultaneously, hiring new employees becomes more difficult for the employers, thus allowing unions and similar organizations to have a stronger bargaining position.
Your theory of price determination in the labor market is based on the notion of bargaining and capacity to bargain, in the sense that one of the sides could have greater bargaining power with low unemployment. I know this model rather well, and it is wrong.

High wages create unemployment because employees will be employed until the marginal product of their labor can be sold at the price of their wages. If their wages are higher, employers will fire workers until their marginal production increases to the level of their wages. That way they will cut their losses.
Iosef Cross wrote:Under capitalism labor is employed to the production of goods for the consumers.
No... under capitalism, labor is employed by private individuals in enterprises (e.g. corporations) that have a tendency to become larger and larger. What that labor is employed to do has nothing to do with the economic model.
Has EVERYTHING to do! The value of labor is determined by the value of the product of the labor, the value of the consumer goods. To increase wages you have to increase the value of what labor produces! Of course, the existence of uncertainty about the product of labor generates a gap between wages and the product of labor.

The foundation of modern economic science is the recognition that prices and costs tend to converge. In classical economics, the economists though that the quantity of labor determined the value of the goods, while modern economists think that it is the other way around.
Iosef Cross wrote: Unemployment is the discoordination between the plans to supply labor to the marked made by workers and plans to demand labor made by entrepreneurs. This discoordination is the result of uncertainty about the actual conditions of the market. If uncertainty didn't existe, unemployment wouldn't. But you cannot abolish uncertainty, as it is an integral part of the human condition.
Unemployment is not the result of capitalists guessing how much labor there is to buy and guessing low every time. That's a bit absurd.
It is not if you had some basic understanding of economics.

Of course, to somebody like you, that doesn't know what the word uncertainty means, it seems like absurd. However, if you learn the meaning of uncertainty you will some day understand what I meant.

Let's try:

- Uncertainty (in economics) is defined as the existence of a gap between the model of economic reality that decision makers have and economic reality itself.

- Unemployment is defined as the proportion of the labor force that is searching for labor for more than one month.

- These people usually have frustrated expectations: They didn't expect to be searching for employment for months at end.

- Frustrated expectation cannot exist if there isn't uncertainty: If people have the correct model of the economic reality in their minds, their expectations will be always correct.

- That's because their expectations are frustrated if their action plan has not produced the outcome that was foreseen.
Firstly, what about when there is obviously more supply than there is demand in the labor market with no likelihood of that changing in the immediate future (for example, now)?
Well, that hydraulic nation of having more supply than demand is only valid for the treatment of simpler problems than the present macroeconomic problems of the United States.

In the US I think that high unemployment is the result of the incorrection of macroeconomic imbalances. The correct route to solve the present problem in my view will be the following:

1- Raise interest rates.

2- Let many corporations fail.

3- Let unemployment rise even higher.

4- Let prices fall.

5- The process will be painful, but in the end the economic system will have corrected it's problems and will be in the route for prosperity.

In the present case the US government is not solving this problem and will force the US economy into a long stagnation. That's the case of Japan, they entered in the same process since the early 90's. Now they are stagnated for nearly 20 years and counting.
Secondly, why would things like an increase in cost of labor increase unemployment, as you suggest later on with your statement that minimum wages increase unemployment?
Every economist know that minimum wages increase unemployment. That's because minimum wages are designed to raise the price of labor, with means that people will buy less labor.
User avatar
Iosef Cross
Village Idiot
Posts: 541
Joined: 2010-03-01 10:04pm

Re: Can you have a sustained tight labor market in capitalis

Post by Iosef Cross »

Errata:
Did you read the rest of my post? You don't need to be so aggressive. I would recommend the sincere attempt understanding of the argument of somebody before starting the flaming.
User avatar
Iosef Cross
Village Idiot
Posts: 541
Joined: 2010-03-01 10:04pm

Re: Can you have a sustained tight labor market in capitalis

Post by Iosef Cross »

Simon_Jester wrote:
HMS Conqueror wrote:We know the market level tends to move people from unproductive jobs to productive jobs and not produce wasteful "churning" because the incentives reward that. That's why you rarely hear about competent doctors or plumbers getting fired, instead it's people working in borderline obsolete industries like journalism, or dysfunctional parts of useful industries, like the Big Three.
So where does that put us at times when corporations are doing massive reductions in force, like now? Why are you so confident that the incentives do reward only non-wasteful firing, that you won't see executives firing people based on perverse incentives like the desire to boost stock prices in a bad quarter regardless of what it does for the company in the long term?
Corporations fire people to cut their losses. What is a recession? A recession is a process of discovery of excessive optimistic expectations. These expectations are proven wrong and expected profits turn out to be losses.

As result, the expected productivity of labor falls, with creates the tendency for mass firings. With millions of unemployed people, their expectations about their wages will fall, reducing the wages that they offer in the market, with will make unemployment fall.

This is a process of information transmission, with exists because people have wrong information at the start of the process. If uncertainty didn't exist, recessions wouldn't exist, as well as unemployment.
Post Reply