Tom's post reminds me of an entry some time  ago on the Working Class Culture 
blog. Some young professor wrote about how his working-class background made 
him a harder worker as a professor. Something like that. I made a nominal 
protest, citing  the British working-class slogan, "Bloody Rate-Busteer," but 
didn't follow up the responses.

Carrol

Carrol

-----Original Message-----
From: [email protected] 
[mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Tom Walker
Sent: Friday, May 09, 2014 3:15 PM
To: PEN-L list
Subject: [Pen-l] Scoundrel Time


http://ecologicalheadstand.blogspot.com/2014/05/scoundrel-time.html
Friday, May 9, 2014


Scoundrel Time

Twenty years ago, the Journal of Economic Issues published a note by Warren 
Samuels on "'Shirking' and 'Business Sabotage'." Citing Thorstein Veblen's 
analysis of business sabotage, Samuels was scathing in his criticism of the 
ideological double standard of the mainstream efficiency wage literature:

        Pejorative emphasis on shirking merely, but effectively, constitutes 
either taking the employer side or assuming that there is nothing further to be 
worked out, which in practice is typically simply inaccurate. Indeed, even 
talking about management's failure to solve the principal-agent problem 
privileges the employer position. Mainstream theory is asymmetrical.

And:


        The analyst who opposes worker shirking without criticism of industrial 
sabotage is taking sides, and the analyst who opposes industrial sabotage 
without criticism of shirking is also taking sides.

It's worth delving into just how pejorative shirk is. Oxford defines it as "to 
avoid meanly, to shrink selfishly from duty... Slink or sneak away, practice 
fraud or trickery..." Etymologically, the word is suspected of coming from the 
German Schurke, a scoundrel. Well, there's your value-free positive, eschewing 
the normative, neoclassical economics for you!

Warren's criticism was resoundingly ignored by economists theorizing about 
shirking. A Google Scholar search turns up ten citations, four of them by David 
Spencer. By contrast there are 4575 results for a search on the canonical 
source by Carl Shapiro and Joseph Stiglitz, "Equilibrium Unemployment as a 
Worker Discipline Device."

Searching inside the search results for Shapiro and Stiglitz gives further 
insight into the asymmetry of mainstream theory. Using ten phrases such as 
"shirking workers" and "employee who shirks" and a like number of complementary 
phrases, "shirking employers" and "firms who shirks" returns totals of 588 and 
3, respectively, after eliminating the false positives for the latter such as 
"…to prevent shirking, employers…"


Interestingly enough, one of the three dissident results that turns up is from 
a fireside chat  <http://www.searchengine.org.uk/pdfs/5/495.pdf> from July 1933 
by Franklin Delano Roosevelt, explaining the New Deal's Industrial Recovery Act:

        The proposition is simply this: 

        If all employers will act together to shorten hours and raise wages we 
can put people back to work. No employer will suffer, because the relative 
level of competitive cost will advance by the same amount for all. But if any 
considerable group should lag or shirk, this great opportunity will pass us by 
and we will go into another desperate winter. This must not happen.
        ...
        It will be clear to you, as it is to me, that while the shirking 
employer may undersell his competitor, the saving he thus makes is made at the 
expense of his country’s welfare... 

Posted by Sandwichman  <http://www.blogger.com/profile/11159060882083015637> at 
4:02 PM <http://econospeak.blogspot.ca/2014/05/scoundrel-time.html>  


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