http://econospeak.blogspot.com/2014/09/lump-of-labor-day-special-advanced.html

"…if there be but a certain proportion of work to be done; and that the
same be already done by the not-Beggars; then to employ the Beggars about
it, will but transfer the want from one hand to another…" – John Graunt,
1662.

In a previous post, Graunt Work
<http://econospeak.blogspot.com/2014/08/graunt-work.html>, I discussed the
theological foundations of John Graunt's *Natural and Political
Observations made upon the Bills of Mortality* and hinted at the
unacknowledged survival of assumptions of divine providence in expectations
of a harmonious social order. This post is concerned with the distinction
between the "certain proportion of work" assumed by Graunt (or possibly
inserted by Petty) in his discussion of employing beggars and the "fixed
amount of work" assumption, alleged by economists to be a widespread
fallacy.


Proportion and number are two distinct concepts in mathematics. The
distinction is fundamental to mathematical reasoning. The title of Fra Luca
Pacioli's classic *Summa de Arithmetica, Geometrica, Proportioni et
Proportionalita* suggests the importance of the concept of proportion.


"One of Graunt's prevailing concerns," Philip Kreager has argued, "was to
show that the body politic was integrated in the divine order in virtue of
the numerical symmetry, intrinsic proportionality, and correspondences
which could be found in its constituent parts." The word "proportion"
appears 40 times in Graunt's text, where it consistently refers to the
relation of one part to another or of a part to a whole -- not to simple
quantities or amounts. "Quantity" occurs only once in the book and "amount"
not at all. Quantities and amounts are indicated in Graunt's text by the
word "number."


There has been some conjecture regarding the extent of William Petty's
contribution to Graunt's book. In his 1939 introduction, Walter Willcox
suggested passages may be ascribed to Petty:

"...wherever conjectures, whether numerical or not, are made but no
evidence offered in support of them… Furthermore, numerical statements
which apply to matters of popular or political interest, but are of no
importance for science, are supposed to be his."

Using Willcox's criteria, the passage about employing beggars is arguably
Petty's. Petty shared with Graunt the idea of a unique and profound
significance to proportionality. Petty was educated as a physician and had
been an anatomy instructor at Oxford. In his preface to *The Political
Anatomy of Ireland*, Petty wrote:

"Sir Francis Bacon, in his *Advancement of Learning*, hath made a judicious
Parallel in many particulars, between the Body Natural, and Body Politick,
and between the Arts of preserving both in Health and Strength: And it is
as reasonable, that as Anatomy is the best foundation of one, so also of
the other; and that to practice upon the Politick, without knowing the
Symmetry, Fabrick, and Proportion of it, is as casual as the practice of
Old-women and Empyricks."

So if proportion has such a conspicuous significance, how does it get
confused with quantity? For example, after citing Graunt on the "proportion
of work to be done," historian Peter Buck went on to state that "Graunt
presupposes that there is only a fixed amount of work to be done…"
apparently oblivious to the crucial distinction between a *certain
proportion* and a *fixed amount*.


One might suppose that economics has inherited a special concern for
proportion from Graunt and Petty, the pioneers of political arithmetic.
Unemployment and interest rates; productivity and price indices;
efficiency, equality and inequality; elasticity of demand and of
substitution are all proportional. Even the intersection of supply and
demand is a proportion (an equality). So where does the attributed
assumption of a "fixed *amount* of work" fit in with all this
proportionality?

"There is, say they, a certain quantity of labour to be performed. This
used to be performed by hands, without machines, or with very little help
from them. But if now machines perform a larger share than before, suppose
one fourth part, so many hands as are necessary to work that fourth part,
will be thrown out of work, or suffer in their wages. The principle itself
is false. There is not a precise limited quantity of labour, beyond which
there is no demand." – Dorning Rasbotham, 1780.

"In accordance with this theory it is held that there is a certain fixed
amount of work to be done, and that it is best in the interests of the
workmen that each shall take care not to do too much work, in order that
thus the Lump of Labour may be spread out thin over the whole body of
work-people." – David F. Schloss, 1891.

"Economists have historically rejected the concerns of the Luddites as an
example of the 'lump of labor' fallacy, the supposition that an increase in
labor productivity inevitably reduces employment because there is only a
finite amount of work to do." – David H. Autor, 2014.

Characteristic of the *hundreds* of denunciations of the supposed
lump-of-labor fallacy (Sandwichman has amassed over 500 examples) is a
obstinate refusal to substantiate allegations of such a belief with
documentary evidence. "We don't have to show you any stinking badges!"
Oddly enough, the denunciations also omit reference to particular
authorities on the fallacy claim, settling for allusions to a nebulous view
held by unnamed "economists" -- the above Autor quote is typical. Moreover,
various arguments offered as "proof" of the fallacy of the assumption of a
fixed amount of work evaporate with the simple substitution of a "certain
proportion" for the conventional "fixed amount."


Of course a "certain proportion of work" is also vague. It might refer to a
proportion of work to population, to industrial output, to resource
consumption or to virtually anything else. Nevertheless, the alternatives
of an "infinite amount of work to do" or of demand for labor that
automatically adjusts to changes in the supply of labor are even less
tenable.


One might also suppose that the increasing reliance of economics on
mathematical modeling would make economists sensitive to the not-so-subtle
distinction between quantity and proportion. Such a supposition would be
premature, however. Liping Ma's study of math teachers' understanding of
math fundamentals in China and the United States, reviewed by Roger Howe
<http://www.ams.org/notices/199908/rev-howe.pdf?ref=Sex%C3%9Ehop.Com>, found
that:

"…successful completion of college coursework is not evidence of thorough
understanding of elementary mathematics. Most university mathematicians see
much of advanced mathematics as a deepening and broadening, a refinement
and clarification, an extension and fulfillment of elementary mathematics.
However, it seems that it is possible to take and pass advanced courses
without understanding how they illuminate more elementary material,
particularly if one’s understanding of that material is superficial."

So much for rigor. In addition, it's not a sure thing that understanding of
math guarantees an unbiased use of it. Kahan et al.
<http://www.cogsci.bme.hu/~ktkuser/KURZUSOK/BMETE47MC15/2013_2014_1/kahanEtAl2013.pdf>
found
that "more numerate subjects would use their quantitative reasoning
capacity selectively to conform their interpretation of the data to the
result most consistent with their political outlooks."


In a reply to comments from four economists on his *General Theory of
Employment*, Keynes doubted that "many modern economists really accept
Say's Law that supply creates its own demand. But they have not been aware
that they were tacitly assuming it." Similarly, although economists may not
have expressly believed, "that every individual spends the whole of his
income either on consumption or on buying, directly or indirectly, newly
produced capital goods," nevertheless, they tacitly assumed it. "They have
discarded these older ideas without becoming aware of the consequences."


Keynes was wrong. Economists didn't "discard" the older ideas, they
renounced the *form* in which they were expressed and devised new bottles
in which to store the coveted old wine.


The tacit assumptions that Keynes highlighted are assumptions of inherent
proportionality (the divinely ordained harmonious social order). Say's Law
can be restated as: demand increases *in proportion to* an increase in
supply. The tacit assumption about spending is that an increase in income
will result in *proportional* increases, respectively, in consumption and
investment.


One of the inevitable consequences of these tacit assumptions is that the
proportion of work to be done must also be a constant. In other words, the
alleged lump of labor, which in its distorted "fixed amount of work"
formula is *refuted* by Say's Law is, in its original form of a "certain
proportion of work," a *corollary* to Say's Law!

-- 
Cheers,

Tom Walker (Sandwichman)
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