wage-fund doctrine

E163116

The wage-fund doctrine is a classical economic theory that posits workers’ wages are paid from a fixed, predetermined pool of capital, limiting total employment and wage levels.

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wage-fund doctrine canonical 1

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Predicate Object
instanceOf classical economics concept
economic theory
advocatedBy John Elliott Cairnes
John Stuart Mill
Nassau William Senior
associatedWith 19th-century British economists
classical political economy
assumes a given stock of circulating capital available to pay wages
labor demand is constrained by the wage fund
wages are advanced by capitalists before production is completed
coreIdea the size of the wage fund limits the average wage level
the size of the wage fund limits total employment
the wage fund is fixed in the short run
workers’ wages are paid out of a predetermined fund of capital
criticizedBy Alfred Marshall
Francis Amasa Walker
Karl Marx
marginal productivity theorists
decline late 19th century
epistemicStatus largely discredited
field economics
labor economics
geographicFocus United Kingdom
historicalSignificance illustrates early attempts to link capital and wages
served as a target for the development of marginalist wage theory
implies a trade-off between wage levels and employment levels
raising wages without increasing the fund reduces employment
influencedBy David Ricardo’s capital theory
classical theories of capital accumulation
logicalConsequence given the fund, higher wages per worker imply fewer workers employed
given the fund, more workers imply lower average wages
normativeImplication emphasis on capital accumulation to raise wages
skepticism about legislative wage increases
rejectedBy most modern economists
relatedConcept capital accumulation
classical theory of distribution
subsistence wage theory
replacedBy marginal productivity theory of distribution
neoclassical labor demand theory
teachingContext history of economic thought
timePeriod early to mid-19th century
viewOnPolicy wage increases without more capital are harmful to employment
viewOnPopulation population growth can reduce wages if the fund is fixed
viewOnUnions trade unions cannot permanently raise general wage levels
viewOnWages wages determined by division of wage fund among workers

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classical economics associatedWithConcept wage-fund doctrine