Iron law of wages

The iron law of wages is a proposed law of economics that asserts that real wages always tend, in the long run, toward the minimum wage necessary to sustain the life of the worker. The theory was first named by Ferdinand Lassalle in the mid-nineteenth century. Karl Marx and Friedrich Engels attribute the doctrine to Lassalle (notably in Marx's 1875 Critique of the Gotha Program), the idea to Thomas Malthus's (1798) An Essay on the Principle of Population, and the terminology to Goethe's "great, eternal iron laws" in Das Göttliche.[1][2][3]

It was coined in reference to the views of classical economists such as David Ricardo's law of rent, and the competing population theory of Thomas Malthus. It held that the market price of labor (which tends toward the minimum required for the subsistence of the laborers) would always, or almost always, reduce as the working population increased and vice versa. Ricardo believed that this happened only under particular conditions.[4]

  1. ^ Critique of the Gotha Programme, Karl Marx, Chapter 2, footnote 1, (1875)
  2. ^ "Letters: Marx-Engels Correspondence 1875". Marxists.org. Retrieved October 13, 2010.
  3. ^ William J. Baumol (May 1983). "Marx and the Iron Law of Wages". The American Economic Review. 73 (2): 303–308. JSTOR 1816859.
  4. ^ "The Project Gutenberg eBook of Letters of Ricardo to Malthus, by James Bonar".

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