- Baumol's cost disease
Baumol's cost disease (also known as the Baumol Effect) is a phenomenon described by
William J. Baumol andWilliam G. Bowen in the 1960s. It involves a rise of salaries in jobs that have experienced no increase of labor productivity in response to rising salaries in other jobs which did experience such labor productivity growth. This goes against the theory in classical economics that wages are always closely tied to labor productivity changes.The rise of wages in jobs without productivity gains is caused by the necessity to compete for employees with jobs that did experience gains and hence can naturally pay higher salaries, just as classical economics predicts. For instance, if the music industry pays its musicians 19th century style salaries, the musicians may decide to quit and get a job at an automobile factory where salaries are commensurate to high labor productivity. Hence, musicians' salaries are increased not due to labor productivity increases in the music industry, but rather due to productivity and wage increases in other industries.
The original study was conducted for the
performing arts sector. Baumol and Bowen pointed out that the same number of musicians are needed to play a Beethovenstring quartet today as were needed in the 1800s; that is, the productivity of Classical music performance has not increased. On the other hand, wages of musicians (as well as in all other professions) have increased greatly since the 19th century.In a range of businesses, such as the car manufacturing sector and the retail sector, workers are continually getting more productive due to technological innovations to their tools and equipment. In contrast, in some labor-intensive sectors that rely heavily on human interaction or activities, such as
nursing ,education , or the performing arts there is little or no growth in productivity over time. As with the string quartet example, it takes nurses the same amount of time to change a bandage, or college professors the same amount of time to mark anessay , in 2006 as it did in 1966.Baumol's cost disease is often used to describe the lack of growth in productivity in public services such as public hospitals and state colleges. Since many
public administration activities are heavily labor-intensive there is little growth in productivity over time. As a result growth in theGDP will generate little more resources to be spent in public sector. Thus public sector production is more depended on taxation level than growth in theGDP .Effects, symptoms, and therapy
Producers can react to wage inflation in a number of ways:
* Decrease quantity/supply
* Decrease quality
* Increase price
* Increase non-monetary compensation / employvolunteer s
* Increase total factor productivityThe reported productivity gains of the service industry in the late 1990s can be mostly attributed to total factor productivity. cite web
last = Bosworth
first = Barry P
coauthors = Jack E Triplett
year = 2003
url = http://www.brook.edu/views/articles/bosworth/200309.htm
title = Productivity Measurement Issues in Services Industries: "Baumol's Disease" Has been Cured
publisher = The Brookings Institution] Providers decreased the cost of ancillary labour throughoutsourcing or technology. Examples includeoffshoring data entry andbookkeeping forhealth care providers , and replacing manually-marked essays in educationalassessment withmultiple choice tests that can be automatically marked (seeScantron ).The total factor productivity treatment is not available to the performing arts sector, because the consumable good is the labour itself. Instead, it has been observed that increases in price of the performing arts has been offset by increases in
standard of living and entertainment spending by consumers. cite web
last = Heilbrun
first = James
year = 2003
url = http://publishing.eur.nl/ir/repub/asset/782/TOWSE%20EBOOK_pages0103-0113.pdf
title = Baumol's Cost Disease
format = PDF
work = A handbook of cultural economics
publisher = Edward Elgar] The extent to which the other treatments have been employed is subjective.References
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