奴隶制与自由劳动经济的微观分析

Labor eJournal Pub Date : 1997-07-01 DOI:10.2139/ssrn.62685
H. Ergin, S. Sayan
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引用次数: 7

摘要

在奴隶制度下,企业(种植园)的劳动力成本除了监管成本外,还包括获得奴隶的成本和发给奴隶的生存补偿费。在本文中,我们将先前在奴隶制理论文献中讨论的监管成本问题放在一边,重点关注劳动力成本的这两个特殊组成部分。我们分析了这种成本结构对盈利能力、效率和均衡工资决定水平的影响,并将其与自由劳动力市场体系进行了比较,并将其与需求侧库诺蒂克竞争的连续性进行了比较。为此,我们首先使用了一个以规模技术收益递减为特征的模型,并与Vedder等人(1990)的发现相似,表明奴隶制制度下的均衡生存工资严格低于劳动的边际产量。然后,我们将模型扩展到自由劳动力市场,给定相同的技术和偏好,涵盖从垄断到极限完全竞争的可能性,并获得第二个可能更引人注目的结果:与不完全竞争自由劳动力市场的均衡不同,奴隶制和完全竞争均衡是帕累托最优的。此外,我们对劳动力市场情景的比较表明,奴隶主对废除奴隶制的抵制与自由劳动力市场中需求侧竞争的预期水平直接相关,而自由劳动力市场将取代奴隶制。最后,我们表明,从我们的分析中得出的结论在规模技术的恒定回报下仍然普遍有效。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
A Microeconomic Analysis of Slavery in Comparison to Free Labor Economies
In addition to supervision costs, the labor cost of an enterprise (plantation) in the system of slavery consists of the cost of acquiring the slaves and the subsistence compensation given out to the slaves. In this paper, we leave aside the issue of supervision costs previously taken up in the theoretical literature on slavery, and focus on these two peculiar components of labor costs. We analyze the implications of this cost structure on the levels of profitability, efficiency and determination of equilibrium wages, and compare them to systems with free labor markets, along a continuum of demand side Cournotic competition. For this purpose, we first use a model characterized by a decreasing returns to scale technology, and show, parallel to the findings of Vedder, et. al. (1990), that the equilibrium subsistence wage in the system of slavery is strictly lower than the marginal product of labor. We then extend the model, given the same technology and preferences, to free labor markets covering possibilities ranging from monopsony to perfect competition in the limit, and obtain a second and perhaps more striking result: Differently from equilibria in imperfectly competitive free labor markets, slavery and perfect competition equilibria are Pareto optimal. Furthermore, our comparisons across labor market scenarios suggest that the resistance of slaveholders to the abolishment of slavery is directly related to the expected level of demand side competition in the free labor market which would replace slavery. Finally, we show that the conclusions derived from our analysis would remain generally valid under a constant returns to scale technology as well.
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