The "endogenous growth" people might gain from reading all of the
chapters in CAPITAL on the production process, Steve Marglin's "What
do Bosses Do?," Braverman, etc., etc.

On 5/11/06, soula avramidis <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:

I think ben Fine has exposed the shortcomings of endogenous growth. A friend
called  Romer's exercise in what Wade calls 'the art of paradigm
maintenance', of saving assumptions, which is in effect what Krugman means
when he says economics is advancing along 'the path of least mathematical
resistance.

 both can be right, because the cost structure will be heavily influenced by
volume of production and therefore increasing returns. What they all seem to
be missing here is that the pin factory also contained people with different
skill levels. They introduce scale without introducing diversity, and
therefore miss an important point in uneven development. Charles Babbage
went into the English pin factory and shows that those persons tinning
(whitening) the pins made 6 shillings a day, while those straightening the
wire only made 1 shilling a day. So if you split up a production process, as
today e.g. with the Mexican maquilas, you put all the low skill, low-wage
out to the third world. The knowledge-economy guys seem to me to miss that
the potential for upgrading knowledge is different in the tinning of pins
than in the straightening of wires. Clearly the poor countries could be
better off if they had complete pin-factories, even though they might be
less efficient than those in the rich world.






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--
Jim Devine / "the world still seems stuck in greed-lock, ruled by
fossilized fools fueled by fossil fuels." -- Swami Beyondananda

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