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Report of the Royal Commission on Labour in India

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fullscreen: Report of the Royal Commission on Labour in India

Monograph

Identifikator:
1850495947
URN:
urn:nbn:de:zbw-retromon-233603
Document type:
Monograph
Title:
Report of the Royal Commission on Labour in India
Place of publication:
London
Publisher:
His Majesty's Stationery Off.
Year of publication:
1931
Scope:
xviii, 580 S.
graph. Darst., Kt.
Digitisation:
2022
Collection:
Economics Books
Usage license:
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Chapter

Document type:
Monograph
Structure type:
Chapter
Title:
Chapter XII. - The income of the industrial worker
Collection:
Economics Books

Contents

Table of contents

  • Report of the Royal Commission on Labour in India
  • Title page
  • Contents
  • Chapter I. - Introduction
  • Chapter II. - Migration and the factory worker
  • Chapter III. - The employment of the factory worker
  • Chapter IV. - Hours in factories
  • Chapter V. - Working conditions in factories
  • Chapter VI. - Seasonal factories
  • Chapter VII. - Unregulated factories
  • Chapter VIII. - Mines
  • Chapter IX. - Railways
  • Chapter X. - Railways - continued
  • Chapter XI. - Transport services and public works
  • Chapter XII. - The income of the industrial worker
  • Chapter XIII. - Indebtedness
  • Chapter XIV. - Health and welfare of the industrial worker
  • Chapter XV. - Housing of the industrial worker
  • Chapter XVI. - Workmen's compensation
  • Chapter XVII. - Trade unions
  • Chapter XVIII. - Industrial disputes
  • Chapter XIX. - The planatations
  • Chapter XX. - Recruitment for Assam
  • Chapter XXI. - Wages on planatations
  • Chapter XXII. - Burma and India
  • Chapter XXIV. - Statistics and administration
  • Chapter XXV. - Labour and the constitution

Full text

py 
THE INCOME OF THE INDUSTRIAL WORKER. 197 
position not later than a year ago. Indeed, many of our facts relate to 
parlier dates. 
IT. 
Earnings of Cotton Mill Operatives. 
We now endeavour to set down a fow statements regarding 
the general wage levels in some of the leading branches of industry. 
In the cotton textile mills, over two-thirds of the operatives of British 
India are employed in the Bombay Presidency, and, as we have stated, 
there is here a large amount of detailed statistical information available. 
The three important centres in this Presidency are Bombay, Ahmedabad 
and Sholapur. . The first wages investigation made by the Bombay 
Labour Office related to May 1914 and May 1921, the second to August 
1923, and the third to May 1926 in the case of Ahmedabad and to July 
1926 in the case of Bombay and Sholapur. These last figures were pub- 
ished in 1930, and no later statistics are available. We therefore con- 
fine our attention to the last enquiry which was based on the actual muster 
rolls of selected mills in each of the three centres. A feature of import- 
ance here is, to quote the Labour Office, the “very wide variations 
which exist both in the methods of payment and the manner in which the 
rates are fixed not only as between centre and centre but also as between 
anit and unit in a particular centre *. In Bombay the average earnings 
of the two-loom weavers in 19 selected mills varied between Rs. 1-9-1 and 
Rs. 2-1-6 per day. In Ahmedabad the variations were even wider. The 
average daily earnings for men according to this enquiry were Rs. 1-8-0 
In Bombay, Rs. 1-6-8 in Ahmedabad and Rs. 1-0-5 in Sholapur. For 
women the respective figures were Re. 0-11-11, Re. 0-12-6 and Re. 0-6-8. 
In the selected mills in Bombay, no children were employed ; for Ahmed- 
abad and Sholapur their average daily earnings were Re. 0-5-6 and Re. 0-4-0 
respectively. In every centre absenteeism is a factor of some importance, 
and In the table below we give the average monthly earnings of all 
operatives so far ag they are available, and the percentage and average 
earnings of operatives who worked without any absence '— 
Group. 
Men .. 
Women . 
Children  ., 
Centre. 
Bombay . 
Ahmedabad oe 
Sholapur .. 
Bombay 
Ahmedabad 
Sholapur 
Ahmedabad ot 
Sholapur . 
Average 
monthly 
earnings of 
all workers. 
Rs. a. ». 
37 10 2 
23 is 6 
17 12 4 
9 15 7 
x "10 4 
Workers who worked without 
any absence. 
o/o age, 
Average monthly 
earnings, 
Rs. A. 
53 
56 
31 
4 3 6 
38 4 0 
26 10 ¢ 
33 
58 
25 
70 
8 
20 4 6 
21 1 6 
11 6 7 
| 
9 4 6 
6 13 10
	        

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