re: National Socio-Economic Security Need for Encryption Technology
Perry Metzger wrote:
Perhaps I should start being more vicious when I'm using sarcasm.
Nowhere in the writings of any Austrian economist will you find >anything claiming that the wages for a given job are linked to capital investment by the employer.
I already gave some quotes of Austrian economists in another post, but maybe you didn't read it, so here I go again: Henry Hazlitt in 'economics in one lesson' (p. 139): "The best way to raise wages, therefore, is to raise marginal labor productivity. This can be done by many methods: by an increase in capital accumulation - i.e. by an increase in the machines with which the workers are aided..." Murray Rothbard in 'the free market reader' (p. 31): "Wage rates are low in many foreign countries because capital equipment is small and technologically primitive. Unaided by much capital, worker productivity is far lower than in the United States." Lew Rockwell in 'the economics of liberty' (p. 26): "Wages are determined by the productivity of the individual laborer, which in turn is largely determined by the amount of capital invested per worker." I could go on, but I think this will suffice. As I already said in two of my other posts on this subject, when Austrian economists say that wages depend on the amount of capital invested, they mean on a regional/national level, not on the level of individuals. Bart Croughs
Bart Croughs writes:
Nowhere in the writings of any Austrian economist will you find anything claiming that the wages for a given job are linked to capital investment by the employer.
I already gave some quotes of Austrian economists in another post, but = maybe you didn't read it, so here I go again:
Henry Hazlitt in 'economics in one lesson' (p. 139): "The best way to = raise wages, therefore, is to raise marginal labor productivity. This = can be done by many methods: by an increase in capital accumulation - =
^^^^^^^^^^^^
i.e. by an increase in the machines with which the workers are aided..."
You should read your own quotes. No one claimed that you can't increase productivity and income on average under some circumstances by increased capital investment. What was being made fun of was the simplistic misunderstanding of what the underlying mechanisms are. Prices, including the price of labor, are set purely by the marketplace. Under some circumstances, incomes will be determined by investment levels made by employers. Under others, they will not. The important feature is the market principle, not the capital investment. The point of my "green pylons" posting was to note that it is the market direction of the investment and not the investment that is important. Impediments to trade create wastes of capital just as surely as burning cash in the marketplace does. If you were really an Austrian, and not a confused person, you would know that all the Austrians and Chicago School people are for completely free trade, something you don't seem to get in your expositions on capital flows. Perry
participants (2)
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Bart Croughs -
Perry E. Metzger