Gulf News

The blue-collars are getting hard done by

A perfect storm of globalisat­ion and automation leaves them less to do and take home

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ack in April, I wrote about one of the most troubling mysteries in economics, the falling labour share. Less of the income the economy produces is going to people who work, and more is going to people who own things.

This trend is worrying because it contribute­s to increased inequality — poor people own much less of the land and capital in the economy than rich people do. The devaluatio­n of workers could also increase unemployme­nt, social unrest and general malaise.

No one would like to see capitalism transform into the kind of dystopia envisioned by Karl Marx. That’s why even though the decline in labour’s share has so far been relatively modest, economists are racing to diagnose the cause before the problem gets any worse.

Recently, a lot of attention has focused on the idea that monopoly power might be causing the shift. But the famous paper that draws this connection — by David Autor, David Dorn, Lawrence Katz, Christina Patterson and John Van Reenen — also shows that it can account for perhaps only 20 per cent of the change. This means other possible explanatio­ns for labour’s decline, like increasing automation or globalisat­ion, need to be re-examined.

Economists Mai Dao, Mitali Das and Zsoka Koczan of the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund argue that the culprit is not automation or offshoring alone, but the interactio­n between the two. As evidence, they note that the labour share has been falling not just in rich nations, but in developing countries as well.

If globalisat­ion were purely to blame, this wouldn’t be happening. Standard trade theories imply that because rich countries have a lot of capital and poor countries have a lot of labour, when these countries start to trade, labour’s share of income should go down in the countries where it used to be scarce — ie, the rich world — but should rise in the poor countries where it was previously abundant. That’s not what’s happening.

Meanwhile, if automation is just now starting to make workers obsolete, developing countries shouldn’t be experienci­ng the fall in labour share at the same time, because in technologi­cal terms they’re decades behind the rich countries. The authors confirm that investment goods — machines, vehicles, computers, etc — haven’t really gotten much cheaper in poor countries, as they have in rich ones.

So the puzzle really boils down to this: Why is the labour share falling in the developing world?

Dao and his co-authors offer a hypothesis. It has to do with the types of industries that exist in poor countries before and after trade gets opened up. When poor countries are isolated from the global economy, they tend to specialise in things that rely on a lot of cheap labour — farming, low-end services and simple labour-intensive manufactur­ing.

Local landlords and other capital owners do well, but don’t have a chance to get truly rich, because any investment in machinery or technology can be undercut by a flood of low-wage workers. So they don’t bother making the investment­s in the first place.

This dearth of capital spending is exacerbate­d by rudimentar­y or dysfunctio­nal financial systems.

Opportunit­ies for capitalist­s

But when trade opens up, the rich countries start offshoring manufactur­ing jobs to the poor countries. These jobs offer better opportunit­ies for workers, but much better opportunit­ies for capitalist­s.

Even as capitalist­s in the US or Japan or France get rich cutting labour costs by shipping jobs to China, Chinese capitalist­s get rich because they’re finally able to amass huge business empires.

The IMF economists also predict that global financial integratio­n should help alleviate the pressure on labour in poor countries. If American, European, Japanese and Taiwanese companies are able to invest in a developing country like China, the inflow of foreign money will boost incomes for local workers and compete down the profits of local capital owners.

So what about rich countries? Here, the argument is that automation and globalisat­ion are working together — companies in rich countries can ship labour-intensive manufactur­ing jobs in electronic­s assembly, toys and clothing to China and Bangladesh, while buying advanced machine tools and robots to do more high-end manufactur­ing of things like microproce­ssors and aeroplanes. As a result, workers in rich countries where routine jobs were more common were hit harder by both free trade and the advent of cheap automation.

In other words, the two most convention­al explanatio­ns for rising inequality and falling wages might both be correct. A perfect storm of robots and free trade — and some monopoly power to boot — could be shifting power from the proletaria­t to the capitalist­s.

With all these factors at work, maybe the real puzzle is why workers aren’t doing even worse than they are.

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 ?? Hugo A. Sanchez/©Gulf News ??
Hugo A. Sanchez/©Gulf News

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