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Division of labour

The division of labour is the separation of the tasks in any economic system or organisation so that participants may specialize (specialisation). Individuals, organizations, and nations are endowed with or acquire specialized capabilities, and either form combinations or trade to take advantage of the capabilities of others in addition to their own. Specialized capabilities may include equipment or natural resources as well as skills. Training and combinations of equipment and other assets acting together are often important. For example, an individual may specialize by acquiring tools and the skills to use them effectively just as an organization may specialize by acquiring specialized equipment and hiring or training skilled operators. The division of labour is the motive for trade and the source of economic interdependence.

Visiting a Nail Factory by Léonard Defrance (18th century)
Division of labor CPU and GPU

Historically, an increasing division of labour is associated with the growth of total output and trade, the rise of capitalism, and the increasing complexity of industrialised processes. The concept and implementation of division of labour has been observed in ancient Sumerian (Mesopotamian) culture, where assignment of jobs in some cities coincided with an increase in trade and economic interdependence. Division of labour generally also increases both producer and individual worker productivity.

After the Neolithic Revolution, pastoralism and agriculture led to more reliable and abundant food supplies, which increased the population and led to specialization of labour, including new classes of artisans, warriors, and the development of elites. This specialization was furthered by the process of industrialisation, and Industrial Revolution-era factories. Accordingly, many classical economists as well as some mechanical engineers, such as Charles Babbage, were proponents of division of labour. Also, having workers perform single or limited tasks eliminated the long training period required to train craftsmen, who were replaced with less-paid but more productive unskilled workers.[1]

Pre-modern theories edit

Plato edit

In Plato's Republic, the origin of the state lies in the natural inequality of humanity, which is embodied in the division of labour:

Well then, how will our state supply these needs? It will need a farmer, a builder, and a weaver, and also, I think, a shoemaker and one or two others to provide for our bodily needs. So that the minimum state would consist of four or five men....

— Republic (Penguin Classics ed.), p. 103

Silvermintz (2010) noted that "Historians of economic thought credit Plato, primarily on account of arguments advanced in his Republic, as an early proponent of the division of labour."[2] Notwithstanding this, Silvermintz argues that "While Plato recognises both the economic and political benefits of the division of labour, he ultimately critiques this form of economic arrangement insofar as it hinders the individual from ordering his own soul by cultivating acquisitive motives over prudence and reason."[2]

Xenophon edit

Xenophon, in the 4th century BC, makes a passing reference to division of labour in his Cyropaedia (a.k.a. Education of Cyrus).

Just as the various trades are most highly developed in large cities, in the same way, food at the palace is prepared in a far superior manner. In small towns, the same man makes couches, doors, ploughs and tables, and often he even builds houses, and still, he is thankful if only he can find enough work to support himself. And it is impossible for a man of many trades to do all of them well. In large cities, however, because many make demands on each trade, one alone is enough to support a man, and often less than one: for instance one man makes shoes for men, another for women, there are places even where one man earns a living just by mending shoes, another by cutting them out, another just by sewing the uppers together, while there is another who performs none of these operations but assembles the parts. Of necessity, he who pursues a very specialised task will do it best.[3]

Augustine of Hippo edit

A simile used by Augustine of Hippo shows that the division of labour was practised and understood in late Imperial Rome. In a brief passage of his The City of God, Augustine seems to be aware of the role of different social layers in the production of goods, like household (familiae), corporations (collegia) and the state.[4]

…like workmen in the street of the silversmiths, where one vessel, in order that it may go out perfect, passes through the hands of many, when it might have been finished by one perfect workman. But the only reason why the combined skill of many workmen was thought necessary, was, that it is better that each part of an art should be learned by a special workman, which can be done speedily and easily, than that they should all be compelled to be perfect in one art throughout all its parts, which they could only attain slowly and with difficulty.

— The City of God (tr. Marcus Dods), VII.4

Medieval Persian scholars edit

The division of labour was discussed by multiple medieval Persian scholars. They considered the division of labour between members of a household, between members of society and between nations. For Nasir al-Din al-Tusi and al-Ghazali the division of labour was necessary and useful. The similarity of the examples provided by these scholars with those provided by Adam Smith (such as al-Ghazali's needle factory and Tusi's claim that exchange, and by extension the division of labour, are the consequences of the human reasoning capability and that no animals have been observed to exchange one bone for another) led some scholars to conjecture that Smith was influenced by the medieval Persian scholarship.[5]

Modern theories edit

William Petty edit

 
Sir William Petty
 
Petty - Economic Writings, 1899

Sir William Petty was the first modern writer to take note of the division of labour, showing its has worth in existence and usefulness in Dutch shipyards. Classically, the workers in a shipyard would build ships as units, finishing one before starting another. But the Dutch had it organised with several teams each doing the same tasks for successive ships. People with a particular task to do must have discovered new methods that were only later observed and justified by writers on political economy.

Petty also applied the principle to his survey of Ireland. His breakthrough was to divide up the work so that large parts of it could be done by people with no extensive training.

Bernard de Mandeville edit

 
Fable of the Bees by Bernard Mandeville

Bernard de Mandeville discussed the matter in the second volume of The Fable of the Bees (1714). This elaborates many matters raised by the original poem about a 'Grumbling Hive'. He says:

But if one will wholly apply himself to the making of Bows and Arrows, whilst another provides Food, a third builds Huts, a fourth makes Garments, and a fifth Utensils, they not only become useful to one another, but the Callings and Employments themselves will in the same Number of Years receive much greater Improvements, than if all had been promiscuously followed by every one of the Five.

David Hume edit

When every individual person labors apart, and only for himself, his force is too small to execute any considerable work; his labour being employed in supplying all his different necessities, he never attains a perfection in any particular art; and as his force and success are not at all times equal, the least failure in either of these particulars must be attended with inevitable ruin and misery. Society provides a remedy for these three inconveniences. By the conjunction of forces, our power is augmented: By the partition of employment, our ability increases: And by mutual succour we are less exposed to fortune and accidents. 'Tis by this additional force, ability, and security, that society becomes advantageous.

- David Hume, A Treatise on Human Nature

Henri-Louis Duhamel du Monceau edit

 
Facsimile of the first page of du Monceau's introduction to Art de l'Épinglier, with "division de ce travail" highlighted

In his introduction to The Art of the Pin-Maker (Art de l'Épinglier, 1761),[6] Henri-Louis Duhamel du Monceau writes about the "division of this work":[6]

There is nobody who isn't surprised of the small price of pins; but we shall be even more surprised, when we know how many different operations, most of them very delicate, are mandatory to make a good pin. We are going to go through these operations in a few words to stimulate the curiosity to know their detail; this enumeration will supply as many articles which will make the division of this work.… The first operation is to have brass go through the drawing plate to calibrate it.…

By "division of this work," du Monceau is referring to the subdivisions of the text describing the various trades involved in the pin making activity; this can also be described as a division of labour.

Adam Smith edit

 
Adam Smith portrait

In the first sentence of An Inquiry into the Nature and Causes of the Wealth of Nations (1776), Adam Smith foresaw the essence of industrialism by determining that division of labour represents a substantial increase in productivity. Like du Monceau, his example was the making of pins.

Unlike Plato, Smith famously argued that the difference between a street porter and a philosopher was as much a consequence of the division of labour as its cause. Therefore, while for Plato the level of specialisation determined by the division of labour was externally determined, for Smith it was the dynamic engine of economic progress. However, in a further chapter of the same book, Smith criticised the division of labour, saying that it makes man "as stupid and ignorant as it is possible for a human creature to become" and that it can lead to "the almost entire corruption and degeneracy of the great body of the people.…unless the government takes some pains to prevent it."[7] The contradiction has led to some debate over Smith's opinion of the division of labour.[8] Alexis de Tocqueville agreed with Smith: "Nothing tends to materialize man, and to deprive his work of the faintest trace of mind, more than extreme division of labor."[9] Adam Ferguson shared similar views to Smith, though was generally more negative.[10]

The specialization and concentration of the workers on their single subtasks often leads to greater skill and greater productivity on their particular subtasks than would be achieved by the same number of workers each carrying out the original broad task, in part due to increased quality of production, but more importantly because of increased efficiency of production, leading to a higher nominal output of units produced per time unit.[11] Smith uses the example of a production capability of an individual pin maker compared to a manufacturing business that employed 10 men:[12]

One man draws out the wire; another straights it; a third cuts it; a fourth points it; a fifth grinds it at the top for receiving the head; to make the head requires two or three distinct operations; to put it on is a peculiar business; to whiten the pins is another; it is even a trade by itself to put them into the paper; and the important business of making a pin is, in this manner, divided into about eighteen distinct operations, which, in some manufactories, are all performed by distinct hands, though in others the same man will sometimes perform two or three of them. I have seen a small manufactory of this kind, where ten men only were employed, and where some of them consequently performed two or three distinct operations. But though they were very poor, and therefore but indifferently accommodated with the necessary machinery, they could, when they exerted themselves, make among them about twelve pounds of pins in a day. There are in a pound upwards of four thousand pins of a middling size. Those ten persons, therefore, could make among them upwards of forty-eight thousand pins in a day. Each person, therefore, making a tenth part of forty-eight thousand pins, might be considered as making four thousand eight hundred pins in a day. But if they had all wrought separately and independently, and without any of them having been educated to this peculiar business, they certainly could not each of them have made twenty, perhaps not one pin in a day.

Smith saw the importance of matching skills with equipment—usually in the context of an organisation. For example, pin makers were organised with one making the head, another the body, each using different equipment. Similarly, he emphasised a large number of skills, used in cooperation and with suitable equipment, were required to build a ship.

In the modern economic discussion, the term human capital would be used. Smith's insight suggests that the huge increases in productivity obtainable from technology or technological progress are possible because human and physical capital are matched, usually in an organisation. See also a short discussion of Adam Smith's theory in the context of business processes. Babbage wrote a seminal work "On the Economy of Machinery and Manufactures" analysing perhaps for the first time the division of labour in factories.[13]

Immanuel Kant edit

 
Kant

In the Groundwork of the Metaphysics of Morals (1785), Immanuel Kant notes the value of the division of labour:[14]

All crafts, trades and arts have profited from the division of labour; for when each worker sticks to one particular kind of work that needs to be handled differently from all the others, he can do it better and more easily than when one person does everything. Where work is not thus differentiated and divided, where everyone is a jack-of-all-trades, the crafts remain at an utterly primitive level.

Karl Marx edit

Marx argued that increasing the specialisation may also lead to workers with poorer overall skills and a lack of enthusiasm for their work. He described the process as alienation: workers become more and more specialised and work becomes repetitive, eventually leading to complete alienation from the process of production. The worker then becomes "depressed spiritually and physically to the condition of a machine."[15]

Additionally, Marx argued that the division of labour creates less-skilled workers. As the work becomes more specialised, less training is needed for each specific job, and the workforce, overall, is less skilled than if one worker did one job entirely.[16]

Among Marx's theoretical contributions is his sharp distinction between the economic and the social division of labour.[17] That is, some forms of labour co-operation are purely due to "technical necessity", but others are a result of a "social control" function related to a class and status hierarchy. If these two divisions are conflated, it might appear as though the existing division of labour is technically inevitable and immutable, rather than (in good part) socially constructed and influenced by power relationships. He also argues that in a communist society, the division of labour is transcended, meaning that balanced human development occurs where people fully express their nature in the variety of creative work that they do.[18]

Henry David Thoreau and Ralph Waldo Emerson edit

Henry David Thoreau criticised the division of labour in Walden (1854), on the basis that it removes people from a sense of connectedness with society and with the world at large, including nature. He claimed that the average man in a civilised society is less wealthy, in practice than one in "savage" society. The answer he gave was that self-sufficiency was enough to cover one's basic needs.[19]

Thoreau's friend and mentor, Ralph Waldo Emerson, criticised the division of labour in his "The American Scholar" speech: a widely informed, holistic citizenry is vital for the spiritual and physical health of the country.[19]

Émile Durkheim edit

In his seminal work, The Division of Labor in Society, Émile Durkheim[20] observes that the division of labour appears in all societies and positively correlates with societal advancement because it increases as a society progresses.

Durkheim arrived at the same conclusion regarding the positive effects of the division of labour as his theoretical predecessor, Adam Smith. In The Wealth of Nations, Smith observes the division of labour results in "a proportionable increase of the productive powers of labour."[21] While they shared this belief, Durkheim believed the division of labour applied to all "biological organisms generally," while Smith believed this law applied "only to human societies."[22] This difference may result from the influence of Charles Darwin's On the Origin of Species on Durkheim's writings.[22] For example, Durkheim observed an apparent relationship between "the functional specialisation of the parts of an organism" and "the extent of that organism's evolutionary development," which he believed "extended the scope of the division of labour so as to make its origins contemporaneous with the origins of life itself…implying that its conditions must be found in the essential properties of all organised matter."[22]

Since Durkheim's division of labour applied to all organisms, he considered it a "natural law" and worked to determine whether it should be embraced or resisted by first analysing its functions.[22] Durkheim hypothesised that the division of labour fosters social solidarity, yielding "a wholly moral phenomenon" that ensures "mutual relationships" among individuals.[23]

 
Émile Durkheim

As social solidarity cannot be directly quantified, Durkheim indirectly studies solidarity by "classify[ing] the different types of law to find...the different types of social solidarity which correspond to it."[23] Durkheim categorises:[24]

  • criminal laws and their respective punishments as promoting mechanical solidarity, a sense of unity resulting from individuals engaging in similar work who hold shared backgrounds, traditions, and values; and
  • civil laws as promoting organic solidarity, a society in which individuals engage in different kinds of work that benefit society and other individuals.

Durkheim believes that organic solidarity prevails in more advanced societies, while mechanical solidarity typifies less developed societies.[25] He explains that in societies with more mechanical solidarity, the diversity and division of labour is much less, so individuals have a similar worldview.[26] Similarly, Durkheim opines that in societies with more organic solidarity, the diversity of occupations is greater, and individuals depend on each other more, resulting in greater benefits to society as a whole.[26] Durkheim's work enabled social science to progress more efficiently "in…the understanding of human social behavior."[27]

Ludwig von Mises edit

 
Ludwig von Mises

Marx's theories, including his negative claims regarding the division of labour, have been criticised by the Austrian economists, notably Ludwig von Mises. The primary argument is that the economic gains accruing from the division of labour far outweigh the costs, thus developing on the thesis that division of labor leads to cost efficiencies. It is argued that it is fully possible to achieve balanced human development within capitalism and alienation is downplayed as mere romantic fiction.

According to Mises, the idea has led to the concept of mechanization in which a specific task is performed by a mechanical device, instead of an individual labourer. This method of production is significantly more effective in both yield and cost-effectiveness, and utilises the division of labour to the fullest extent possible. Mises saw the very idea of a task being performed by a specialised mechanical device as being the greatest achievement of division of labour.[28]

Friedrich A. Hayek edit

In "The Use of Knowledge in Society", Friedrich A. Hayek states:[29]

 
Friedrich Hayek portrait

The price system is just one of those formations which man has learned to use (though he is still very far from having learned to make the best use of it) after he had stumbled upon it without understanding it. Through it, not only a division of labour but also a coordinated utilisation of resources based on an equally divided knowledge has become possible. The people who like to deride any suggestion that this may so usually distort the argument by insinuating that it asserts that by some miracle just that sort of system has spontaneously grown up which is best suited to modern civilisation. It is the other way round: man has been able to develop that division of labour on which our civilisation is based because he happened to stumble upon a method which made it possible. Had he not done so, he might still have developed some other, altogether different, type of civilisation, something like the "state" of the termite ants, or some other altogether unimaginable type.

Globalisation and global division of labour edit

The issue reaches its broadest scope in the controversies about globalisation, which is often interpreted as a euphemism for the expansion of international trade based on comparative advantage. This would mean that countries specialise in the work they can do at the lowest relative cost measured in terms of the opportunity cost of not using resources for other work, compared to the opportunity costs experienced by countries. Critics, however, allege that international specialisation cannot be explained sufficiently in terms of "the work nations do best", rather that this specialisation is guided more by commercial criteria, which favour some countries over others.[30][31]

The OECD advised in June 2005[32] that:

Efficient policies to encourage employment and combat unemployment are essential if countries are to reap the full benefits of globalisation and avoid a backlash against open trade... Job losses in some sectors, along with new job opportunities in other sectors, are an inevitable accompaniment of the process of globalisation... The challenge is to ensure that the adjustment process involved in matching available workers with new job openings works as smoothly as possible.

Few studies have taken place regarding the global division of labour. Information can be drawn from ILO and national statistical offices.[33] In one study, Deon Filmer estimated that 2.474 billion people participated in the global non-domestic labour force in the mid-1990s. Of these:[34]

  • around 15%, or 379 million people, worked in the industry;
  • a third, or 800 million worked in services and
  • over 40%, or 1,074 million, in agriculture.

The majority of workers in industry and services were wage and salary earners—58 per cent of the industrial workforce and 65 per cent of the services workforce. But a large portion was self-employed or involved in family labour. Filmer suggests the total of employees worldwide in the 1990s was about 880 million, compared with around a billion working on their own account on the land (mainly peasants), and some 480 million working on their own account in industry and services. The 2007 ILO Global Employment Trends Report indicated that services have surpassed agriculture for the first time in human history:[33]

In 2006 the service sector's share of global employment overtook agriculture for the first time, increasing from 39.5 to 40 per cent. Agriculture decreased from 39.7 per cent to 38.7 per cent. The industry sector accounted for 21.3 per cent of total employment.

Contemporary theories edit

In the modern world, those specialists most preoccupied in their work with theorising about the division of labour are those involved in management and organisation.

In general, in capitalist economies, such things are not decided consciously.[35] Different people try different things, and that which is most effective cost-wise (produces the most and best output with the least input) will generally be adopted. Often, techniques that work in one place or time do not work as well in another.

Styles of division of labour edit

Two styles of management that are seen in modern organisations are control and commitment:[36]

  1. Control management, the style of the past, is based on the principles of job specialisation and the division of labour. This is the assembly-line style of job specialisation, where employees are given a very narrow set of tasks or one specific task.
  2. Commitment division of labour, the style of the future, is oriented on including the employee and building a level of internal commitment towards accomplishing tasks. Tasks include more responsibility and are coordinated based on expertise rather than a formal position.

Job specialisation is advantageous in developing employee expertise in a field and boosting organisational production. However, disadvantages of job specialisation included limited employee skill, dependence on entire department fluency, and employee discontent with repetitive tasks.[36]

Labour hierarchy edit

It is widely accepted among economists and social theorists that the division of labour is, to a great extent, inevitable within capitalist societies, simply because no one can do all tasks at once. Labour hierarchy is a very common feature of the modern capitalist workplace structure, and the way these hierarchies are structured can be influenced by a variety of different factors, including:[36]

  • Size: as organisations increase in size, there is a correlation in the rise of the division of labour.
  • Cost: cost limits small organisations from dividing their labour responsibilities.
  • Development of new technology: technological developments have led to a decrease in the amount of job specialisation in organisations as new technology makes it easier for fewer employees to accomplish a variety of tasks and still enhance production. New technology has also been helpful in the flow of information between departments helping to reduce the feeling of department isolation.

It is often argued that the most equitable principle in allocating people within hierarchies is that of true (or proven) competency or ability. This concept of meritocracy could be read as an explanation or as a justification of why a division of labour is the way it is.[37]

This claim, however, is often disputed by various sources, particularly:

  • Marxists[38] claim hierarchy is created to support the power structures in capitalist societies which maintain the capitalist class as the owner of the labour of workers, in order to exploit it. Anarchists[39] often add to this analysis by defending that the presence of coercive hierarchy in any form is contrary to the values of liberty and equality.
  • Anti-imperialists see the globalised labour hierarchy between first world and third world countries necessitated by companies (through unequal exchange) that create a labor aristocracy by exploiting the poverty of workers in the developing world, where wages are much lower. These increased profits enable these companies to pay higher wages and taxes in the developed world (which fund welfare in first world countries), thus creating a working class satisfied with their standard of living and not inclined to revolution.[40] This concept is further explored in dependency theory, notably by Samir Amin[31] and Zak Cope.[30]

Limitations edit

Adam Smith famously said in The Wealth of Nations that the division of labour is limited by the extent of the market. This is because it is by the exchange that each person can be specialised in their work and yet still have access to a wide range of goods and services. Hence, reductions in barriers to exchange lead to increases in the division of labour and so help to drive economic growth. Limitations to the division of labour have also been related to coordination and transportation costs.[41]

There can be motivational advantages to a reduced division of labour (which has been termed ‘job enlargement’ and 'job enrichment').[42] Jobs that are too specialised in a narrow range of tasks are said to result in demotivation due to boredom and alienation. Hence, a Taylorist approach to work design contributed to worsened industrial relations.

There are also limitations to the division of labour (and the division of work) that result from workflow variations and uncertainties.[43][44] These help to explain issues in modern work organisation, such as task consolidations in business process re-engineering and the use of multi-skilled work teams. For instance, one stage of a production process may temporarily work at a slower pace, forcing other stages to slow down. One answer to this is to make some portion of resources mobile between stages so that those resources must be capable of undertaking a wider range of tasks. Another is to consolidate tasks so that they are undertaken one after another by the same workers and other resources. Stocks between stages can also help to reduce the problem to some extent but are costly and can hamper quality control. Modern flexible manufacturing systems require both flexible machines and flexible workers.

In project-based work, the coordination of resources is a difficult issue for the project manager as project schedules and resulting resource bookings are based on estimates of task durations and so are subject to subsequent revisions. Again, consolidating tasks so that they are undertaken consecutively by the same resources and having resources available that can be called on at short-notice from other tasks can help to reduce such problems, though at the cost of reduced specialisation.

There are also advantages in a reduced division of labour where knowledge would otherwise have to be transferred between stages.[45] For example, having a single person deal with a customer query means that only that one person has to be familiar with the customer's details. It is also likely to result in the query being handled faster due to the elimination of delays in passing the query between different people.

Gendered division of labour edit

The clearest exposition of the principles of sexual division of labour across the full range of human societies can be summarised by a large number of logically complementary implicational constraints of the following form: if women of childbearing ages in a given community tend to do X (e.g., preparing soil for planting) they will also do Y (e.g., the planting); while for men the logical reversal in this example would be that if men plant, they will prepare the soil.

White, Brudner, and Burton's (1977) "Entailment Theory and Method: A Cross-Cultural Analysis of the Sexual Division of Labor",[46] using statistical entailment analysis, shows that tasks more frequently chosen by women in these order relations are those more convenient in relation to child rearing. This type of finding has been replicated in a variety of studies, including those on modern industrial economies. These entailments do not restrict how much work for any given task could be done by men (e.g., in cooking) or by women (e.g., in clearing forests), but are only least-effort or role-consistent tendencies. To the extent that women clear forests for agriculture, for example, they tend to do the entire agricultural sequence of tasks on those clearings. In theory, these types of constraints could be removed by provisions of child care, but ethnographic examples are lacking.

Industrial organisational psychology edit

Job satisfaction has been shown to improve as an employee is given the task of a specific job. Students who have received PhDs in a chosen field later report increased satisfaction compared to their previous jobs. This can be attributed to their high levels of specialisation.[47] The higher the training needed for the specialised job position, the higher is the level of job satisfaction as well, although many highly specialised jobs can be monotonous and produce high rates of burnout periodically.[48]

Division of work edit

In contrast to the division of labour, a division of work refers to the division of a large task, contract, or project into smaller tasks—each with a separate schedule within the overall project schedule.

Division of labour, instead, refers to the allocation of tasks to individuals or organisations according to the skills and/or equipment those people or organisations possess. Often division of labour and division of work are both part of the economic activity within an industrial nation or organisation.

Disaggregated work edit

A job divided into elemental parts is sometimes called "disaggregated work". Workers specialising in particular parts of the job are called professionals. The workers doing a portion of a non-recurring work may be called contractors, freelancers, or temporary workers. Modern communication technologies, particularly the Internet, gave rise to the sharing economy, which is orchestrated by online marketplaces for various kinds of disaggregated work.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Rosenberg, Nathan (1993). Exploring the Black Box: Technology, economics and history. Cambridge University Press. pp. 25, 27–32, 37–8. ISBN 0-521-459559.
  2. ^ a b Silvermintz, Daniel (2010). "Plato's Supposed Defense of the Division of Labor: A Reexamination of the Role of Job Specialisation in the Republic". History of Political Economy. 42 (4): 747–72. doi:10.1215/00182702-2010-036.
  3. ^ Book VIII, ch, ii, 4[]-6, cited in The Ancient Economy by M. I. Finley. Penguin books 1992, p. 135.
  4. ^ Burns, Anthony (16 July 2020). Social Institutions and the Politics of Recognition: From the Ancient Greeks to the Reformation. Rowman & Littlefield. p. 127. ISBN 978-1-78348-880-3.
  5. ^ Hosseini, Hamid (1998). "Seeking the Roots of Adam Smith's Division of Labor in Medieval Persia". History of Political Economy. 30 (4): 667-673. doi:10.1215/00182702-30-4-653.
  6. ^ a b du Monceau, Henri-Louis Duhamel. 1761. "Introduction." In Art de l'Épinglier, by R. Réaumur, and A. de Ferchault. Paris: Saillant et Nyon.
  7. ^ Smith, Adam (1976) [1904]. Cannan, Edwin (ed.). An Inquiry Into the Nature and Causes of the Wealth of Nations. Chicago: University of Chicago Press. pp. ii.302–303. ISBN 978-0-226-76374-3. In the progress of the division of labour, the employment of the far greater part of those who live by labour, that is, of the great body of people, comes to be confined to a few very simple operations, frequently one or two. But the understandings of the greater part of men are necessarily formed by their ordinary employments. The man whose whole life is spent in performing a few simple operations, of which the effects too are, perhaps, always the same, or very nearly the same, has no occasion to exert his understanding, or to exercise his invention in finding out expedients for removing difficulties which never occur. He naturally loses, therefore, the habit of such exertion, and generally becomes as stupid and ignorant as it is possible for a human creature to become.  Curiously, this edition's Index carries no reference to this instance of usage of the phrase 'division of labour.'
  8. ^ Rothbard, Murray. . An Austrian Perspective on the History of Economic Thought. Mises Institute. Archived from the original on 12 June 2012. Retrieved 5 May 2012.
  9. ^ Tocqueville, Alexis de (1841). Democracy in America: Volume I. New York, NY: J. & H. G. Langley. p. 460.
  10. ^ Hill, Lisa (2004). (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 28 July 2013. Retrieved 1 July 2012. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  11. ^ O'Rourke, P.J. (2008). On the Wealth of Nations. London: Atlantic Books. ISBN 9781843543893.
  12. ^ "An Inquiry into the Nature and Causes of the Wealth of Nations, by Adam Smith". www.gutenberg.org. Retrieved 22 April 2020.
  13. ^ Rosenberg, Nathan. . Archived from the original on 4 March 2016. Retrieved 28 March 2014.
  14. ^ Fundamental Principles of the Metaphysic of Morals by Immanuel Kant - Free Ebook. Retrieved 25 April 2019 – via Project Gutenberg.
  15. ^ Marx, Karl. [1844] 1963. "Economic and Philosophical Manuscripts of 1844." In Karl Marx Early Writings, edited by T. B. Bottomore. London: C.A. Watts and Co. § First Manuscript, p. 72.
  16. ^ Marx, Karl. 1849. "Wage Labor & Capital."
  17. ^ Marx, Karl. [1867] 1977. Capital: A Critique of Political Economy, Volume 1. New York: Vintage Books. pp. 781–94.
  18. ^ Rattansi, Ali (1982). Marx and the Division of Labour. London: Macmillan Education UK. doi:10.1007/978-1-349-16829-3. ISBN 978-0-333-28556-5.
  19. ^ a b Khurana, A. (2009). Scientific management : a management idea to reach a mass audience. New Delhi: Global India Pub. ISBN 978-93-80228-01-3. OCLC 495418951.
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Further reading edit

External links edit

  • Summary of Smith's example of pin-making 22 March 2009 at the Wayback Machine
  • . Speakers: Bina Agarwal, Martin Baily, Jean-Louis Beffa, Richard N. Cooper, Jan Fagerberg, Elhanan Helpman, Shelly Lundberg, Valentina Meliciani, Peter Nunnenkamp. Recorded in 2009.

division, labour, division, labour, separation, tasks, economic, system, organisation, that, participants, specialize, specialisation, individuals, organizations, nations, endowed, with, acquire, specialized, capabilities, either, form, combinations, trade, ta. The division of labour is the separation of the tasks in any economic system or organisation so that participants may specialize specialisation Individuals organizations and nations are endowed with or acquire specialized capabilities and either form combinations or trade to take advantage of the capabilities of others in addition to their own Specialized capabilities may include equipment or natural resources as well as skills Training and combinations of equipment and other assets acting together are often important For example an individual may specialize by acquiring tools and the skills to use them effectively just as an organization may specialize by acquiring specialized equipment and hiring or training skilled operators The division of labour is the motive for trade and the source of economic interdependence Visiting a Nail Factory by Leonard Defrance 18th century Division of labor CPU and GPUHistorically an increasing division of labour is associated with the growth of total output and trade the rise of capitalism and the increasing complexity of industrialised processes The concept and implementation of division of labour has been observed in ancient Sumerian Mesopotamian culture where assignment of jobs in some cities coincided with an increase in trade and economic interdependence Division of labour generally also increases both producer and individual worker productivity After the Neolithic Revolution pastoralism and agriculture led to more reliable and abundant food supplies which increased the population and led to specialization of labour including new classes of artisans warriors and the development of elites This specialization was furthered by the process of industrialisation and Industrial Revolution era factories Accordingly many classical economists as well as some mechanical engineers such as Charles Babbage were proponents of division of labour Also having workers perform single or limited tasks eliminated the long training period required to train craftsmen who were replaced with less paid but more productive unskilled workers 1 Contents 1 Pre modern theories 1 1 Plato 1 2 Xenophon 1 3 Augustine of Hippo 1 4 Medieval Persian scholars 2 Modern theories 2 1 William Petty 2 2 Bernard de Mandeville 2 3 David Hume 2 4 Henri Louis Duhamel du Monceau 2 5 Adam Smith 2 6 Immanuel Kant 2 7 Karl Marx 2 8 Henry David Thoreau and Ralph Waldo Emerson 2 9 Emile Durkheim 2 10 Ludwig von Mises 2 11 Friedrich A Hayek 3 Globalisation and global division of labour 4 Contemporary theories 4 1 Styles of division of labour 4 2 Labour hierarchy 5 Limitations 6 Gendered division of labour 7 Industrial organisational psychology 8 Division of work 9 Disaggregated work 10 See also 11 References 12 Further reading 13 External linksPre modern theories editPlato edit In Plato s Republic the origin of the state lies in the natural inequality of humanity which is embodied in the division of labour Well then how will our state supply these needs It will need a farmer a builder and a weaver and also I think a shoemaker and one or two others to provide for our bodily needs So that the minimum state would consist of four or five men Republic Penguin Classics ed p 103 Silvermintz 2010 noted that Historians of economic thought credit Plato primarily on account of arguments advanced in his Republic as an early proponent of the division of labour 2 Notwithstanding this Silvermintz argues that While Plato recognises both the economic and political benefits of the division of labour he ultimately critiques this form of economic arrangement insofar as it hinders the individual from ordering his own soul by cultivating acquisitive motives over prudence and reason 2 Xenophon edit Xenophon in the 4th century BC makes a passing reference to division of labour in his Cyropaedia a k a Education of Cyrus Just as the various trades are most highly developed in large cities in the same way food at the palace is prepared in a far superior manner In small towns the same man makes couches doors ploughs and tables and often he even builds houses and still he is thankful if only he can find enough work to support himself And it is impossible for a man of many trades to do all of them well In large cities however because many make demands on each trade one alone is enough to support a man and often less than one for instance one man makes shoes for men another for women there are places even where one man earns a living just by mending shoes another by cutting them out another just by sewing the uppers together while there is another who performs none of these operations but assembles the parts Of necessity he who pursues a very specialised task will do it best 3 Augustine of Hippo edit A simile used by Augustine of Hippo shows that the division of labour was practised and understood in late Imperial Rome In a brief passage of his The City of God Augustine seems to be aware of the role of different social layers in the production of goods like household familiae corporations collegia and the state 4 like workmen in the street of the silversmiths where one vessel in order that it may go out perfect passes through the hands of many when it might have been finished by one perfect workman But the only reason why the combined skill of many workmen was thought necessary was that it is better that each part of an art should be learned by a special workman which can be done speedily and easily than that they should all be compelled to be perfect in one art throughout all its parts which they could only attain slowly and with difficulty The City of God tr Marcus Dods VII 4 Medieval Persian scholars edit The division of labour was discussed by multiple medieval Persian scholars They considered the division of labour between members of a household between members of society and between nations For Nasir al Din al Tusi and al Ghazali the division of labour was necessary and useful The similarity of the examples provided by these scholars with those provided by Adam Smith such as al Ghazali s needle factory and Tusi s claim that exchange and by extension the division of labour are the consequences of the human reasoning capability and that no animals have been observed to exchange one bone for another led some scholars to conjecture that Smith was influenced by the medieval Persian scholarship 5 Modern theories editWilliam Petty edit nbsp Sir William Petty nbsp Petty Economic Writings 1899Sir William Petty was the first modern writer to take note of the division of labour showing its has worth in existence and usefulness in Dutch shipyards Classically the workers in a shipyard would build ships as units finishing one before starting another But the Dutch had it organised with several teams each doing the same tasks for successive ships People with a particular task to do must have discovered new methods that were only later observed and justified by writers on political economy Petty also applied the principle to his survey of Ireland His breakthrough was to divide up the work so that large parts of it could be done by people with no extensive training Bernard de Mandeville edit nbsp Fable of the Bees by Bernard MandevilleBernard de Mandeville discussed the matter in the second volume of The Fable of the Bees 1714 This elaborates many matters raised by the original poem about a Grumbling Hive He says But if one will wholly apply himself to the making of Bows and Arrows whilst another provides Food a third builds Huts a fourth makes Garments and a fifth Utensils they not only become useful to one another but the Callings and Employments themselves will in the same Number of Years receive much greater Improvements than if all had been promiscuously followed by every one of the Five David Hume edit When every individual person labors apart and only for himself his force is too small to execute any considerable work his labour being employed in supplying all his different necessities he never attains a perfection in any particular art and as his force and success are not at all times equal the least failure in either of these particulars must be attended with inevitable ruin and misery Society provides a remedy for these three inconveniences By the conjunction of forces our power is augmented By the partition of employment our ability increases And by mutual succour we are less exposed to fortune and accidents Tis by this additional force ability and security that society becomes advantageous David Hume A Treatise on Human NatureHenri Louis Duhamel du Monceau edit nbsp Facsimile of the first page of du Monceau s introduction to Art de l Epinglier with division de ce travail highlightedIn his introduction to The Art of the Pin Maker Art de l Epinglier 1761 6 Henri Louis Duhamel du Monceau writes about the division of this work 6 There is nobody who isn t surprised of the small price of pins but we shall be even more surprised when we know how many different operations most of them very delicate are mandatory to make a good pin We are going to go through these operations in a few words to stimulate the curiosity to know their detail this enumeration will supply as many articles which will make the division of this work The first operation is to have brass go through the drawing plate to calibrate it By division of this work du Monceau is referring to the subdivisions of the text describing the various trades involved in the pin making activity this can also be described as a division of labour Adam Smith edit nbsp Adam Smith portraitIn the first sentence of An Inquiry into the Nature and Causes of the Wealth of Nations 1776 Adam Smith foresaw the essence of industrialism by determining that division of labour represents a substantial increase in productivity Like du Monceau his example was the making of pins Unlike Plato Smith famously argued that the difference between a street porter and a philosopher was as much a consequence of the division of labour as its cause Therefore while for Plato the level of specialisation determined by the division of labour was externally determined for Smith it was the dynamic engine of economic progress However in a further chapter of the same book Smith criticised the division of labour saying that it makes man as stupid and ignorant as it is possible for a human creature to become and that it can lead to the almost entire corruption and degeneracy of the great body of the people unless the government takes some pains to prevent it 7 The contradiction has led to some debate over Smith s opinion of the division of labour 8 Alexis de Tocqueville agreed with Smith Nothing tends to materialize man and to deprive his work of the faintest trace of mind more than extreme division of labor 9 Adam Ferguson shared similar views to Smith though was generally more negative 10 The specialization and concentration of the workers on their single subtasks often leads to greater skill and greater productivity on their particular subtasks than would be achieved by the same number of workers each carrying out the original broad task in part due to increased quality of production but more importantly because of increased efficiency of production leading to a higher nominal output of units produced per time unit 11 Smith uses the example of a production capability of an individual pin maker compared to a manufacturing business that employed 10 men 12 One man draws out the wire another straights it a third cuts it a fourth points it a fifth grinds it at the top for receiving the head to make the head requires two or three distinct operations to put it on is a peculiar business to whiten the pins is another it is even a trade by itself to put them into the paper and the important business of making a pin is in this manner divided into about eighteen distinct operations which in some manufactories are all performed by distinct hands though in others the same man will sometimes perform two or three of them I have seen a small manufactory of this kind where ten men only were employed and where some of them consequently performed two or three distinct operations But though they were very poor and therefore but indifferently accommodated with the necessary machinery they could when they exerted themselves make among them about twelve pounds of pins in a day There are in a pound upwards of four thousand pins of a middling size Those ten persons therefore could make among them upwards of forty eight thousand pins in a day Each person therefore making a tenth part of forty eight thousand pins might be considered as making four thousand eight hundred pins in a day But if they had all wrought separately and independently and without any of them having been educated to this peculiar business they certainly could not each of them have made twenty perhaps not one pin in a day Smith saw the importance of matching skills with equipment usually in the context of an organisation For example pin makers were organised with one making the head another the body each using different equipment Similarly he emphasised a large number of skills used in cooperation and with suitable equipment were required to build a ship In the modern economic discussion the term human capital would be used Smith s insight suggests that the huge increases in productivity obtainable from technology or technological progress are possible because human and physical capital are matched usually in an organisation See also a short discussion of Adam Smith s theory in the context of business processes Babbage wrote a seminal work On the Economy of Machinery and Manufactures analysing perhaps for the first time the division of labour in factories 13 Immanuel Kant edit nbsp KantIn the Groundwork of the Metaphysics of Morals 1785 Immanuel Kant notes the value of the division of labour 14 All crafts trades and arts have profited from the division of labour for when each worker sticks to one particular kind of work that needs to be handled differently from all the others he can do it better and more easily than when one person does everything Where work is not thus differentiated and divided where everyone is a jack of all trades the crafts remain at an utterly primitive level Karl Marx edit Marx argued that increasing the specialisation may also lead to workers with poorer overall skills and a lack of enthusiasm for their work He described the process as alienation workers become more and more specialised and work becomes repetitive eventually leading to complete alienation from the process of production The worker then becomes depressed spiritually and physically to the condition of a machine 15 Additionally Marx argued that the division of labour creates less skilled workers As the work becomes more specialised less training is needed for each specific job and the workforce overall is less skilled than if one worker did one job entirely 16 Among Marx s theoretical contributions is his sharp distinction between the economic and the social division of labour 17 That is some forms of labour co operation are purely due to technical necessity but others are a result of a social control function related to a class and status hierarchy If these two divisions are conflated it might appear as though the existing division of labour is technically inevitable and immutable rather than in good part socially constructed and influenced by power relationships He also argues that in a communist society the division of labour is transcended meaning that balanced human development occurs where people fully express their nature in the variety of creative work that they do 18 Henry David Thoreau and Ralph Waldo Emerson edit Henry David Thoreau criticised the division of labour in Walden 1854 on the basis that it removes people from a sense of connectedness with society and with the world at large including nature He claimed that the average man in a civilised society is less wealthy in practice than one in savage society The answer he gave was that self sufficiency was enough to cover one s basic needs 19 Thoreau s friend and mentor Ralph Waldo Emerson criticised the division of labour in his The American Scholar speech a widely informed holistic citizenry is vital for the spiritual and physical health of the country 19 Emile Durkheim edit In his seminal work The Division of Labor in Society Emile Durkheim 20 observes that the division of labour appears in all societies and positively correlates with societal advancement because it increases as a society progresses Durkheim arrived at the same conclusion regarding the positive effects of the division of labour as his theoretical predecessor Adam Smith In The Wealth of Nations Smith observes the division of labour results in a proportionable increase of the productive powers of labour 21 While they shared this belief Durkheim believed the division of labour applied to all biological organisms generally while Smith believed this law applied only to human societies 22 This difference may result from the influence of Charles Darwin s On the Origin of Species on Durkheim s writings 22 For example Durkheim observed an apparent relationship between the functional specialisation of the parts of an organism and the extent of that organism s evolutionary development which he believed extended the scope of the division of labour so as to make its origins contemporaneous with the origins of life itself implying that its conditions must be found in the essential properties of all organised matter 22 Since Durkheim s division of labour applied to all organisms he considered it a natural law and worked to determine whether it should be embraced or resisted by first analysing its functions 22 Durkheim hypothesised that the division of labour fosters social solidarity yielding a wholly moral phenomenon that ensures mutual relationships among individuals 23 nbsp Emile DurkheimAs social solidarity cannot be directly quantified Durkheim indirectly studies solidarity by classify ing the different types of law to find the different types of social solidarity which correspond to it 23 Durkheim categorises 24 criminal laws and their respective punishments as promoting mechanical solidarity a sense of unity resulting from individuals engaging in similar work who hold shared backgrounds traditions and values and civil laws as promoting organic solidarity a society in which individuals engage in different kinds of work that benefit society and other individuals Durkheim believes that organic solidarity prevails in more advanced societies while mechanical solidarity typifies less developed societies 25 He explains that in societies with more mechanical solidarity the diversity and division of labour is much less so individuals have a similar worldview 26 Similarly Durkheim opines that in societies with more organic solidarity the diversity of occupations is greater and individuals depend on each other more resulting in greater benefits to society as a whole 26 Durkheim s work enabled social science to progress more efficiently in the understanding of human social behavior 27 Ludwig von Mises edit nbsp Ludwig von MisesMarx s theories including his negative claims regarding the division of labour have been criticised by the Austrian economists notably Ludwig von Mises The primary argument is that the economic gains accruing from the division of labour far outweigh the costs thus developing on the thesis that division of labor leads to cost efficiencies It is argued that it is fully possible to achieve balanced human development within capitalism and alienation is downplayed as mere romantic fiction According to Mises the idea has led to the concept of mechanization in which a specific task is performed by a mechanical device instead of an individual labourer This method of production is significantly more effective in both yield and cost effectiveness and utilises the division of labour to the fullest extent possible Mises saw the very idea of a task being performed by a specialised mechanical device as being the greatest achievement of division of labour 28 Friedrich A Hayek edit In The Use of Knowledge in Society Friedrich A Hayek states 29 nbsp Friedrich Hayek portraitThe price system is just one of those formations which man has learned to use though he is still very far from having learned to make the best use of it after he had stumbled upon it without understanding it Through it not only a division of labour but also a coordinated utilisation of resources based on an equally divided knowledge has become possible The people who like to deride any suggestion that this may so usually distort the argument by insinuating that it asserts that by some miracle just that sort of system has spontaneously grown up which is best suited to modern civilisation It is the other way round man has been able to develop that division of labour on which our civilisation is based because he happened to stumble upon a method which made it possible Had he not done so he might still have developed some other altogether different type of civilisation something like the state of the termite ants or some other altogether unimaginable type Globalisation and global division of labour editThe issue reaches its broadest scope in the controversies about globalisation which is often interpreted as a euphemism for the expansion of international trade based on comparative advantage This would mean that countries specialise in the work they can do at the lowest relative cost measured in terms of the opportunity cost of not using resources for other work compared to the opportunity costs experienced by countries Critics however allege that international specialisation cannot be explained sufficiently in terms of the work nations do best rather that this specialisation is guided more by commercial criteria which favour some countries over others 30 31 The OECD advised in June 2005 32 that Efficient policies to encourage employment and combat unemployment are essential if countries are to reap the full benefits of globalisation and avoid a backlash against open trade Job losses in some sectors along with new job opportunities in other sectors are an inevitable accompaniment of the process of globalisation The challenge is to ensure that the adjustment process involved in matching available workers with new job openings works as smoothly as possible Few studies have taken place regarding the global division of labour Information can be drawn from ILO and national statistical offices 33 In one study Deon Filmer estimated that 2 474 billion people participated in the global non domestic labour force in the mid 1990s Of these 34 around 15 or 379 million people worked in the industry a third or 800 million worked in services and over 40 or 1 074 million in agriculture The majority of workers in industry and services were wage and salary earners 58 per cent of the industrial workforce and 65 per cent of the services workforce But a large portion was self employed or involved in family labour Filmer suggests the total of employees worldwide in the 1990s was about 880 million compared with around a billion working on their own account on the land mainly peasants and some 480 million working on their own account in industry and services The 2007 ILO Global Employment Trends Report indicated that services have surpassed agriculture for the first time in human history 33 In 2006 the service sector s share of global employment overtook agriculture for the first time increasing from 39 5 to 40 per cent Agriculture decreased from 39 7 per cent to 38 7 per cent The industry sector accounted for 21 3 per cent of total employment Contemporary theories editThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed July 2020 Learn how and when to remove this template message This section s tone or style may not reflect the encyclopedic tone used on Wikipedia See Wikipedia s guide to writing better articles for suggestions January 2020 Learn how and when to remove this template message In the modern world those specialists most preoccupied in their work with theorising about the division of labour are those involved in management and organisation In general in capitalist economies such things are not decided consciously 35 Different people try different things and that which is most effective cost wise produces the most and best output with the least input will generally be adopted Often techniques that work in one place or time do not work as well in another Styles of division of labour edit Two styles of management that are seen in modern organisations are control and commitment 36 Control management the style of the past is based on the principles of job specialisation and the division of labour This is the assembly line style of job specialisation where employees are given a very narrow set of tasks or one specific task Commitment division of labour the style of the future is oriented on including the employee and building a level of internal commitment towards accomplishing tasks Tasks include more responsibility and are coordinated based on expertise rather than a formal position Job specialisation is advantageous in developing employee expertise in a field and boosting organisational production However disadvantages of job specialisation included limited employee skill dependence on entire department fluency and employee discontent with repetitive tasks 36 Labour hierarchy edit It is widely accepted among economists and social theorists that the division of labour is to a great extent inevitable within capitalist societies simply because no one can do all tasks at once Labour hierarchy is a very common feature of the modern capitalist workplace structure and the way these hierarchies are structured can be influenced by a variety of different factors including 36 Size as organisations increase in size there is a correlation in the rise of the division of labour Cost cost limits small organisations from dividing their labour responsibilities Development of new technology technological developments have led to a decrease in the amount of job specialisation in organisations as new technology makes it easier for fewer employees to accomplish a variety of tasks and still enhance production New technology has also been helpful in the flow of information between departments helping to reduce the feeling of department isolation It is often argued that the most equitable principle in allocating people within hierarchies is that of true or proven competency or ability This concept of meritocracy could be read as an explanation or as a justification of why a division of labour is the way it is 37 This claim however is often disputed by various sources particularly Marxists 38 claim hierarchy is created to support the power structures in capitalist societies which maintain the capitalist class as the owner of the labour of workers in order to exploit it Anarchists 39 often add to this analysis by defending that the presence of coercive hierarchy in any form is contrary to the values of liberty and equality Anti imperialists see the globalised labour hierarchy between first world and third world countries necessitated by companies through unequal exchange that create a labor aristocracy by exploiting the poverty of workers in the developing world where wages are much lower These increased profits enable these companies to pay higher wages and taxes in the developed world which fund welfare in first world countries thus creating a working class satisfied with their standard of living and not inclined to revolution 40 This concept is further explored in dependency theory notably by Samir Amin 31 and Zak Cope 30 Limitations editAdam Smith famously said in The Wealth of Nations that the division of labour is limited by the extent of the market This is because it is by the exchange that each person can be specialised in their work and yet still have access to a wide range of goods and services Hence reductions in barriers to exchange lead to increases in the division of labour and so help to drive economic growth Limitations to the division of labour have also been related to coordination and transportation costs 41 There can be motivational advantages to a reduced division of labour which has been termed job enlargement and job enrichment 42 Jobs that are too specialised in a narrow range of tasks are said to result in demotivation due to boredom and alienation Hence a Taylorist approach to work design contributed to worsened industrial relations There are also limitations to the division of labour and the division of work that result from workflow variations and uncertainties 43 44 These help to explain issues in modern work organisation such as task consolidations in business process re engineering and the use of multi skilled work teams For instance one stage of a production process may temporarily work at a slower pace forcing other stages to slow down One answer to this is to make some portion of resources mobile between stages so that those resources must be capable of undertaking a wider range of tasks Another is to consolidate tasks so that they are undertaken one after another by the same workers and other resources Stocks between stages can also help to reduce the problem to some extent but are costly and can hamper quality control Modern flexible manufacturing systems require both flexible machines and flexible workers In project based work the coordination of resources is a difficult issue for the project manager as project schedules and resulting resource bookings are based on estimates of task durations and so are subject to subsequent revisions Again consolidating tasks so that they are undertaken consecutively by the same resources and having resources available that can be called on at short notice from other tasks can help to reduce such problems though at the cost of reduced specialisation There are also advantages in a reduced division of labour where knowledge would otherwise have to be transferred between stages 45 For example having a single person deal with a customer query means that only that one person has to be familiar with the customer s details It is also likely to result in the query being handled faster due to the elimination of delays in passing the query between different people Gendered division of labour editMain articles Gender role Women s work Sexual division of labour and Occupational segregationThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed July 2020 Learn how and when to remove this template message The clearest exposition of the principles of sexual division of labour across the full range of human societies can be summarised by a large number of logically complementary implicational constraints of the following form if women of childbearing ages in a given community tend to do X e g preparing soil for planting they will also do Y e g the planting while for men the logical reversal in this example would be that if men plant they will prepare the soil White Brudner and Burton s 1977 Entailment Theory and Method A Cross Cultural Analysis of the Sexual Division of Labor 46 using statistical entailment analysis shows that tasks more frequently chosen by women in these order relations are those more convenient in relation to child rearing This type of finding has been replicated in a variety of studies including those on modern industrial economies These entailments do not restrict how much work for any given task could be done by men e g in cooking or by women e g in clearing forests but are only least effort or role consistent tendencies To the extent that women clear forests for agriculture for example they tend to do the entire agricultural sequence of tasks on those clearings In theory these types of constraints could be removed by provisions of child care but ethnographic examples are lacking Industrial organisational psychology editJob satisfaction has been shown to improve as an employee is given the task of a specific job Students who have received PhDs in a chosen field later report increased satisfaction compared to their previous jobs This can be attributed to their high levels of specialisation 47 The higher the training needed for the specialised job position the higher is the level of job satisfaction as well although many highly specialised jobs can be monotonous and produce high rates of burnout periodically 48 Division of work editThis section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed July 2020 Learn how and when to remove this template message In contrast to the division of labour a division of work refers to the division of a large task contract or project into smaller tasks each with a separate schedule within the overall project schedule Division of labour instead refers to the allocation of tasks to individuals or organisations according to the skills and or equipment those people or organisations possess Often division of labour and division of work are both part of the economic activity within an industrial nation or organisation Disaggregated work editMain article Disaggregated work This section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed July 2020 Learn how and when to remove this template message A job divided into elemental parts is sometimes called disaggregated work Workers specialising in particular parts of the job are called professionals The workers doing a portion of a non recurring work may be called contractors freelancers or temporary workers Modern communication technologies particularly the Internet gave rise to the sharing economy which is orchestrated by online marketplaces for various kinds of disaggregated work See also editAsset poverty Complex society Economic sector Economies of scale Family economy Fordism Identity performance Industrialisation Kyriarchy Mechanization New international division of labour Newly industrialized country Precariat Precarious work Productive and unproductive labour Price system Role suction Surplus product Temporary work Urbanisation Winner and loser cultureReferences edit Rosenberg Nathan 1993 Exploring the Black Box Technology economics and history Cambridge University Press pp 25 27 32 37 8 ISBN 0 521 459559 a b Silvermintz Daniel 2010 Plato s Supposed Defense of the Division of Labor A Reexamination of the Role of Job Specialisation in the Republic History of Political Economy 42 4 747 72 doi 10 1215 00182702 2010 036 Book VIII ch ii 4 6 cited in The Ancient Economy by M I Finley Penguin books 1992 p 135 Burns Anthony 16 July 2020 Social Institutions and the Politics of Recognition From the Ancient Greeks to the Reformation Rowman amp Littlefield p 127 ISBN 978 1 78348 880 3 Hosseini Hamid 1998 Seeking the Roots of Adam Smith s Division of Labor in Medieval Persia History of Political Economy 30 4 667 673 doi 10 1215 00182702 30 4 653 a b du Monceau Henri Louis Duhamel 1761 Introduction In Art de l Epinglier by R Reaumur and A de Ferchault Paris Saillant et Nyon Smith Adam 1976 1904 Cannan Edwin ed An Inquiry Into the Nature and Causes of the Wealth of Nations Chicago University of Chicago Press pp ii 302 303 ISBN 978 0 226 76374 3 In the progress of the division of labour the employment of the far greater part of those who live by labour that is of the great body of people comes to be confined to a few very simple operations frequently one or two But the understandings of the greater part of men are necessarily formed by their ordinary employments The man whose whole life is spent in performing a few simple operations of which the effects too are perhaps always the same or very nearly the same has no occasion to exert his understanding or to exercise his invention in finding out expedients for removing difficulties which never occur He naturally loses therefore the habit of such exertion and generally becomes as stupid and ignorant as it is possible for a human creature to become nbsp Curiously this edition s Index carries no reference to this instance of usage of the phrase division of labour Rothbard Murray The Celebrated Adam Smith An Austrian Perspective on the History of Economic Thought Mises Institute Archived from the original on 12 June 2012 Retrieved 5 May 2012 Tocqueville Alexis de 1841 Democracy in America Volume I New York NY J amp H G Langley p 460 Hill Lisa 2004 Adam Smith Adam Ferguson and the Division of Labor PDF Archived from the original PDF on 28 July 2013 Retrieved 1 July 2012 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help O Rourke P J 2008 On the Wealth of Nations London Atlantic Books ISBN 9781843543893 An Inquiry into the Nature and Causes of the Wealth of Nations by Adam Smith www gutenberg org Retrieved 22 April 2020 Rosenberg Nathan Babbage pioneer economist by Nathan Rosenberg Archived from the original on 4 March 2016 Retrieved 28 March 2014 Fundamental Principles of the Metaphysic of Morals by Immanuel Kant Free Ebook Retrieved 25 April 2019 via Project Gutenberg Marx Karl 1844 1963 Economic and Philosophical Manuscripts of 1844 In Karl Marx Early Writings edited by T B Bottomore London C A Watts and Co First Manuscript p 72 Marx Karl 1849 Wage Labor amp Capital Marx Karl 1867 1977 Capital A Critique of Political Economy Volume 1 New York Vintage Books pp 781 94 Rattansi Ali 1982 Marx and the Division of Labour London Macmillan Education UK doi 10 1007 978 1 349 16829 3 ISBN 978 0 333 28556 5 a b Khurana A 2009 Scientific management a management idea to reach a mass audience New Delhi Global India Pub ISBN 978 93 80228 01 3 OCLC 495418951 Alpert Harry 1959 Emile Durkheim A Perspective and Appreciation American Sociological Review 24 4 462 65 doi 10 2307 2089532 JSTOR 2089532 A founding father of sociology Emile Durkheim best known for his 1893 seminal work De La Division Du Travail Social The Division of Labor in Society dedicated himself to the establishment of sociology as a legitimate and respected science and as an instrument of rational social action Smith Adam 23 January 2012 The Wealth of Nations Simon amp Brown ISBN 978 1 61382 931 8 a b c d Jones Robert Alun 1992 Emile Durkheim an introduction to four major works Masters of social theory 4 ed Newbury Park California Sage Publ ISBN 978 0 8039 2333 1 a b Durkheim Emile 1893 1997 The Division of Labor in Society New York The Free Press Print Anderson Margaret L and Howard F Taylor 2008 Sociology Understanding a Diverse Society Belmont CA Thomson Wadsworth Print Moody James n d Sociology 138 Theory and Society Duke University Department of Sociology Web Retrieved 16 November 2012 a b Merton Robert K 1994 Durkheim s Division of Labor in Society Sociological Forum 9 1 17 25 doi 10 1007 bf01507702 S2CID 144951894 Alpert Harry 1959 Emile Durkheim A Perspective and Appreciation American Sociological Review 24 4 462 65 doi 10 2307 2089532 JSTOR 2089532 Mises Ludwig 1949 Human Action A Treatise on Economics p 164 Hayek Friedrich A 1945 The Use of Knowledge in Society American Economic Review 35 4 519 30 a b Cope Zak 2015 Divided world divided class global political economy and the stratification of labour under capitalism Kersplebedeb ISBN 978 1 894946 68 1 OCLC 905638389 a b Amin Samir 1976 Unequal development an essay on the social formations of peripheral capitalism Monthly Review Press OCLC 1151842795 Khurana A 2009 Scientific management a management idea to reach a mass audience New Delhi Global India Pub p 136 ISBN 978 93 80228 01 3 OCLC 495418951 a b ILO releases Global Employment Trends 2007 BANGKOK ILO News 25 January 2007 Archived from the original on 6 October 2008 Introduction A World at Work World Development Report 1995 The World Bank pp 9 14 30 June 1995 doi 10 1596 9780195211023 chapter1 ISBN 978 0 19 521102 3 retrieved 3 August 2022 Smith Adam March 2003 The Wealth of Nations New York NY USA Bantam Dell pp 9 27 ISBN 978 0 553 58597 1 a b c McAlister Kizzier Donna 2007 Division of Labor Encyclopedia of Business and Finance 2nd ed via Encyclopedia com 1 December 2014 Heuer Jan Ocko Lux Thomas Mau Steffen Zimmermann Katharina 16 November 2020 Legitimizing Inequality The Moral Repertoires of Meritocracy in Four Countries Comparative Sociology 19 4 5 542 584 doi 10 1163 15691330 BJA10017 ISSN 1569 1322 Parkin Frank 1982 Marxism and Class Theory A Bourgeois Critique Reis 20 185 187 doi 10 2307 40182929 ISSN 0210 5233 JSTOR 40182929 Magda Egoumenides 2014 Philosophical anarchism and political obligation Bloomsbury Academic ISBN 978 1 4411 9357 5 OCLC 900469099 Lenin Vladimir Ilʹich 2010 Imperialism the highest stage of capitalism a popular outline Penguin ISBN 978 0 14 119256 7 OCLC 835797169 Houthakker H S 1956 Economics and Biology Specialization and Speciation Kyklos 9 2 181 189 doi 10 1111 j 1467 6435 1956 tb02717 x Parker Sharon K Wall Toby D Cordery John L 2001 Future work design research and practice Towards an elaborated model of work design PDF Journal of Occupational and Organizational Psychology 74 4 413 440 doi 10 1348 096317901167460 S2CID 53985589 Archived from the original PDF on 6 March 2019 Wadeson Nigel 2013 The Division of Labour under Uncertainty PDF Journal of Institutional and Theoretical Economics 169 2 253 doi 10 1628 093245613X13620416111326 ISSN 0932 4569 Archived from the original PDF on 27 April 2019 Barrera Catherine Grace 2014 Skill Job Design and the Labor Market under Uncertainty Doctoral dissertation Harvard University Harvard Library ID 12274210 Rummel Jeffrey L Walter Zhiping Dewan Rajiv Seidman Abraham 2005 Activity consolidation to improve responsiveness European Journal of Operational Research 161 3 683 703 doi 10 1016 j ejor 2003 07 015 eclectic ss uci edu PDF Archived from the original PDF on 17 May 2006 Retrieved 13 August 2006 Kelly E L Goldberg L R 1959 Correlates of later performance and specialization in psychology A follow up study of the trainees assessed in the VA Selection Research Project Psychological Monographs General and Applied 73 12 1 32 doi 10 1037 h0093748 Adeyoyin S O Agbeze Unazi F Oyewunmi O O Adegun A I Ayodele R O 2015 Effects of Job Specialization and Departmentalization on Job Satisfaction among the Staff of a Nigerian University Library Library Philosophy and Practice 1 20 Further reading editBecker Gary S 1991 Division of Labor in Households and Families Ch 2 in A Treatise on the Family Harvard University Press ISBN 0 674 90698 5 1985 Human Capital Effort and the Sexual Division of Labor Journal of Labor Economics 3 1 2 S33 S58 JSTOR 2534997 Braverman Harry 1974 Labor and Monopoly Capital The Degradation of Work in the Twentieth Century Monthly Review Press Coontz Stephanie and Peta Henderson Women s Work Men s Property The Origins of Gender and Class Cowen Tyler 2008 Division of Labor In Hamowy Ronald ed The Encyclopedia of Libertarianism Thousand Oaks CA SAGE Cato Institute pp 125 26 doi 10 4135 9781412965811 n79 ISBN 978 1 4129 6580 4 LCCN 2008009151 OCLC 750831024 Durkheim Emile 1893 The Division of Labour in Society Emerson Ralph Waldo The American Scholar Filmer Deon Estimating the World at Work a background report Florida Richard 2002 The Rise of the Creative Class The Flight of the Creative Class Froebel F J Heinrichs and O Krey The New International Division of Labour Cambridge UK Cambridge University Press Gintis Herbert Samuel Bowles Robert T Boyd and Ernst Feghr Moral Sentiments and Material Interests The Foundations of Cooperation in Economic Life Goodin Robert E James Mahmud Rice Antti Parpo and Lina Eriksson 2008 Household Regimes Matter Pp 197 257 in Discretionary Time A New Measure of Freedom Cambridge UK Cambridge University Press ISBN 9780521709514 Cambridge ID 9780521709514 Gorz Andre The Division of Labour The Labour Process and Class Struggle in Modern Capitalism Groenewegen Peter 1987 division of labour Pp 901 07 in The New Palgrave A Dictionary of Economics 1 Heartfield James 2001 The Economy of Time Cultural Trends 43 44 155 59 Ollman Bertell Sexual and Social Revolution Rattansi Ali Marx and the Division of Labour Reisman George 1990 1998 Capitalism A Treatise on Economics Laguna Hills CA TJS Books ISBN 978 1 931089 25 8 Solow Robert M and Jean Philippe Touffut eds 2010 permanent dead link The Shape of the Division of Labour Nations Industries and Households dead link Cheltenham UK Edward Elgar Contributors Bina Agarwal Martin Baily Jean Louis Beffa Richard N Cooper Jan Fagerberg Elhanan Helpman Shelly Lundberg Valentina Meliciani and Peter Nunnenkamp Rothbard Murray 19 March 2018 Freedom Inequality Primitivism and the Division of Labor Mises Institute Retrieved 2 July 2020 von Mises Ludwig Human Society The Division of Labor Pp 157 58 in Human Action A Treatise on Economics Human Society The Ricardian Law of Association Pp 158 60 in Human Action A Treatise on Economics Stigler George J 1951 The Division of Labor is Limited by the Extent of the Market Journal of Political Economy 59 3 185 93 JSTOR 1826433 World Development Report 1995 Washington DC World Bank 1996 External links edit nbsp Wikiquote has quotations related to Division of labour Summary of Smith s example of pin making Archived 22 March 2009 at the Wayback Machine Conference The New International Division of Labour Speakers Bina Agarwal Martin Baily Jean Louis Beffa Richard N Cooper Jan Fagerberg Elhanan Helpman Shelly Lundberg Valentina Meliciani Peter Nunnenkamp Recorded in 2009 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Division of labour amp oldid 1205047227, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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