The Economics Book

(Barry) #1

160 DEPRESSIONS AND UNEMPLOYMENT


will not fall by the level required
to remove the unemployment.
In this way the unemployment
is involuntary because workers
are powerless to do anything
about it. There is a commonly
held view that trade unions can
resist the adjustment of wages
to the level required for full
employment through the process
of collective action, so that those
who are unemployed are prevented
from getting work. Keynes placed
this type of unemployment in the
voluntary category, arguing that
workers as a whole are agreeing
openly, or tacitly, not to work
for less than the current wage.
Keynes’ reasoning was different
from that of later economics,
which became dominated by
mathematical modeling. Much of
macroeconomics in the post-war
period was about clarifying what


Keynes said and framing it in terms
of more formal models and
equations. British economist John
Hicks (p.165) formulated Keynesian
ideas in terms of a financial model
known as the ISLM model. After
the war this became the standard
macroeconomic model, and it is
still one of the first things taught
to economics students.

New interpretations
Modern considerations of
Keynes’ work suggest that
what workers are most concerned
with is their wage relative to other
workers. Workers have an idea of
their position in a theoretical
“league table” of pay and will
fiercely fight any wage reductions
that would push them further down
the table. It is interesting to note
that a general increase in the price
level through inflation, which would

also cause a reduction in real wages,
is resisted less strongly because it
affects all workers equally.
Economic theories known as
efficiency wages models (p.302)
ask why firms don’t cut wages to
increase profits and suggest that
firms are reluctant to do so because
a wage cut would demotivate the
existing workers, who would see
their relative position in the league
table undermined. The net effect
of cutting wages would in fact
be a loss in profits because the
benefit of lower wages is more
than offset by the reduction in
productivity that results from
low morale or skilled workers
leaving. In this way workers cannot
choose to price themselves into
work. Related “New Keynesian”
models of wage determination
provide other explanations for
rigid wages (p.303).

President Franklin D. Roosevelt
invested in vast new infrastructure
projects, such as the Hoover Dam
on the Colorado River. Even so, the
government was not pursuing
Keynesian policies.

If by a regularization
of national demand we
prevent... the involuntary
idleness of unemployed
men, we make a real
addition to the
national product.
Sidney Webb
Beatrice Webb
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