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that the aggregate demand of the workers themselves will be very likely increased as a result of the
increased volume of employment, unless the elasticity of demand for labour in response to changes
in money-wages is less than unity. Thus in the new equilibrium there will be more employment than
there would have been otherwise except, perhaps, in some unusual limiting case which has no
reality in practice.
It is from this type of analysis that I fundamentally differ; or rather from the analysis which seems
to lie behind such observations as the above. For whilst the above fairly represents, I think, the way
in which many economists talk and write, the underlying analysis has seldom been written down in
detail.
It appears, however, that this way of thinking is probably reached as follows. In any given industry
we have a demand schedule for the product relating the quantities which can be sold to the prices
asked; we have a series of supply schedules relating the prices which will be asked for the sale of
different quantities on various bases of cost; and these schedules between them lead up to a further
schedule which, on the assumption that other costs are unchanged (except as a result of the change
in output), gives us the demand schedule for labour in the industry relating the quantity of
employment to different levels of wages, the shape of the curve at any point furnishing the elasticity
of demand for labour. This conception is then transferred without substantial modification to
industry as a whole; and it is supposed, by a parity of reasoning, that we have a demand schedule
for labour in industry as a whole relating the quantity of employment to different levels of wages. It
is held that it makes no material difference to this argument whether it is in terms of money-wages
or of real wages. If we are thinking in terms of money-wages, we must, of course, correct for
changes in the value of money; but this leaves the general tendency of the argument unchanged,
since prices certainly do not change in exact proportion to changes in money-wages.
If this is the groundwork of the argument (and, if it is not, I do not know what the groundwork is),
surely it is fallacious. For the demand schedules for particular industries can only be constructed on
some fixed assumption as to the nature of the demand and supply schedules of other industries and
as to the amount of the aggregate effective demand. It is invalid, therefore, to transfer the argument
to industry as a whole unless we also transfer our assumption that the aggregate effective demand is
fixed. Yet this assumption reduces the argument to an
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