Work and consumption in an era of unbalanced technological advance
Benjamin M. Friedman ()
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Benjamin M. Friedman: Harvard University
Journal of Evolutionary Economics, 2017, vol. 27, issue 2, No 2, 237 pages
Abstract:
Abstract Keynes’s “Grandchildren” essay famously predicted both a rapid increase in productivity and a sharp shrinkage of the workweek – to 15 h – over the century from 1930. Keynes was right (so far) about output per capita, but wrong about the workweek. The key reason is that he failed to allow for changing distribution. With widening inequality, median income (and therefore the income of most families) has risen, and is now rising, much more slowly than he anticipated. The failure of the workweek to shrink as he predicted follows. Other factors, including habit formation, socially induced consumption preferences, and network effects are part of the story too. Combining the analysis of Keynes, Meade and Galbraith suggests a way forward for economic policy under the prevailing circumstances.
Keywords: Productivity; Income; Consumption; Leisure; Technological unemployment (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 2017
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DOI: 10.1007/s00191-015-0426-4
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