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[Pen-l] Re: the result of my queries
- To: Pen-l <pen-l@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
- Subject: [Pen-l] Re: the result of my queries
- From: Jim Devine <jdevine03@xxxxxxxxx>
- Date: Fri, 26 Jun 2009 11:15:05 -0700
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I found an even better paper on this subject:
Levy, Frank and Peter Temin. Inequality and Institutions in 20th
Century America. M.I.T.: Unpubl. ms.
(http://www.econ.barnard.columbia.edu/~econhist/papers/InequalityWF.pdf)
On Sat, Jun 20, 2009 at 9:48 AM, Jim Devine<jdevine03@xxxxxxxxx> wrote:
> Thanks to help from pen-pals, especially Erdogan Bakir, I've produced
> the following paragraph. Comments are welcome. I think that it's very
> interesting that that old fraud Martin Feldstein's article admits that
> wages are increasingly falling behind productivity without noting the
> fact that it goes against his core beliefs.
>
>> This [trickle-down] vision, however, contradicts recent experience in the United States and many other advanced capitalist countries. Three O.E.C.D. economists note that
>
>> >>Over the last two decades, the share of wages in total income has tended to decline in a large number of European countries as well as in the United States. (de Serres et al., 2001: 375). <<
>
>> For the U.S., McConnell and Brue’s second assertion above [that real wages always catch up with the trend of labor productivity] seems contradicted by their diagram 26.1 on the same page, at least after about 1980 [2008, p 523]. Looking more deeply, Krueger (1999: 47, 49) found that up to 1998 “labor’s share declined by almost 3 percentage points since reaching a plateau in the mid-1970’s” in the national income and product ac-counts. Using another measure and correcting for the counting “some business owners’ income [as part of] labor compensation” implies a “substantial 5.6-point fall in labor’s share” between 1988 and 1995. Willis and Wroblewski (2007: 15) indicate that real wages lagged behind labor productivity growth by 0.3 percentage point per year between 1973:Q4 to 1995:Q4 and by 0.5 percentage points between 1995:Q4 and 2006:Q3. Finally, Feldstein (2008: 591) finds that between 1970 and 2006, wages lagged 0.2 percentage points per year behind productivity growth. Worse, between 2000 and 2007, this lag was about double, 0.4 percentage points per year.<
>
> sources:
> De Serres, Alain, Stefano Scarpetta, and Christine de la Maisonneuve.
> 2001. Falling Wage Shares in Europe and the United States: How
> Important is Aggregation Bias? Empirica. 28: 375-400.
>
> Feldstein, Martin. 2008. Reference available on demand.
>
> Krueger, Alan B. 1999. Measuring Labor’s Share. American Economics
> Association Pa-pers and Proceedings. 89(2) May: 45-51.
>
> McConnell, Campbell R. and Stanley L. Brue. 2008. Economics:
> Principles, Problems, and Policies. New York: McGraw-Hill/Irwin.
>
> Willis, Jonathan L. and Julie Wroblewski. 2007. What Happened to the
> Gains From Strong Productivity Growth? Federal Reserve Bank of Kansas
> City Economic Review. 1st Quarter: 5-23.
>
>
>
>
>
> --
> Jim Devine / "Segui il tuo corso, e lascia dir le genti." (Go your own
> way and let people talk.) -- Karl, paraphrasing Dante.
>
--
Jim Devine / "Segui il tuo corso, e lascia dir le genti." (Go your own
way and let people talk.) -- Karl, paraphrasing Dante.
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- Thread context:
- [Pen-l] Daniel Pipes on Iran elections,
ken hanly Fri 26 Jun 2009, 22:30 GMT
- [Pen-l] Fwd: Was the Iranian Election Stolen? Does It Matter?,
Julio Huato Fri 26 Jun 2009, 20:34 GMT
- [Pen-l] new radio product,
Doug Henwood Fri 26 Jun 2009, 20:18 GMT
- [Pen-l] PostGlobal - Weisbrot: Was Iran's Election Stolen?,
Robert Naiman Fri 26 Jun 2009, 19:10 GMT
- [Pen-l] Re: the result of my queries,
Jim Devine Fri 26 Jun 2009, 17:40 GMT
- [Pen-l] Michael Jackson and the private equity firms,
Louis Proyect Fri 26 Jun 2009, 16:02 GMT
- [Pen-l] meanwhile, back in Iraq...,
Jim Devine Fri 26 Jun 2009, 15:29 GMT
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