The Economics Book

(Barry) #1

66


DIVIDE UP PIN


PRODUCTION, AND


YOU GET MORE PINS


THE DIVISION OF LABOR


W


henever people work in
a group, they invariably
start by deciding who is
going to do what. It was the great
Adam Smith (p.61) who turned
this division of labor into a
central economic idea. At the very
start of his influential book The
Wealth of Nations, Smith explains
the differences between production
when one person carries out the full

sequence required to make
something, and when several
people each do just one task each.
Writing in 1776, Smith noted that
if one man set about making a pin,
going through the many steps
involved, he might make “perhaps
not one pin in a day.” But by
dividing the process among several
men, with each specializing in a
single step, many pins could be

IN CONTEXT


FOCUS
Markets and firms

KEY THINKER
Adam Smith (1723–90)

BEFORE
380 BCE In The Republic,
the Greek philosopher Plato
explains how a city emerges,
then grows by exploiting the
gains made by dividing labor.

1705 Dutch philosopher
Bernard Mandeville coins the
term “division of labor” in his
The Fable of the Bees.

AFTER
1867 Karl Marx argues that
division of labor alienates
workers and is a necessary
evil that will eventually be
superseded.

1922 Austrian economist
Ludwig von Mises argues
that division of labor is not
alienating but brings huge
benefits, including greater
leisure time.

When workers concentrate
on one task...

... repetition increases
skill and speed.

... no time is
wasted through switching
between tasks.

This increases production
and reduces cost.

Divide up pin production,
and you get more pins.
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