Increasing labor productivity and the future

From Lifeboat Foundation wiki
Jump to navigation Jump to search

This topic is motivated by What It Means That an Hour’s Work Yields a Week’s Food, chapter one of The Human Race to the Future: What Could Happen -- and What to Do by D. Berleant, published by the Lifeboat Foundation.

This page is for crowd sourced commentary and information, from you and others, about this/related topics. Readers are invited to edit this page: to get edit access to this wiki, just send a request to: [email protected].

Introduction

Labor productivity is so high we could all potentially live comfortably working much less than we currently do. What does this mean? Will we work fewer hours in the future than we do now?

Commentary

This article is a stub. Please add or edit information here, add new sections as needed, etc.

References

1. C. Dimitri, A. Effland, and N. Conklin, The 20th century transformation of US agriculture and farm policy, Electronic Information Bulletin Number 3, US Dept. of Agriculture Economic Research Service, June 2005, http://www.ers.usda.gov/publications/eib3/eib3.htm.

2. Economic possibilities for our grandchildren: J. M. Keynes, reprinted in his Essays in Persuasion, W. W. Norton & Co., 1963, pp. 358–373, http://www.econ.yale.edu/smith/econ116a/keynes1.pdf.

3. Taiwan legislature approves 42-hour workweek, Asian Economic News, June 16, 2000, http://www.thefreelibrary.com/Taiwan+legislature+approves+42-hour+workweek.-a062835653.

4. W. D. Nordhaus, Do real-output and real-wage measures capture reality? The history of lighting suggests not. Chapter in T. F. Bresnahan and R. J. Gordon, eds., The Economics of New Goods, U. Chicago Press, 1996, http://www.nber.org/chapters/c6064.pdf.

5. E. L. Forget, The town with no poverty: Using health administration data to revisit outcomes of a Canadian guaranteed annual income field experiment, U. Manitoba, 2011, http://public.econ.duke.edu/~erw/197/forget-cea%20(2).pdf.