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CHAPTER 1V,
that, generally speaking, the short working week is associated with closer
attention to work and stricter supervision than the long one. Further,
in no case did those workers who were working a short week with stricter
discipline suggest that they would like a longer and less intense day or
more intervals. As a matter of fact, the attempt in 1922 to increase the
interval of half an hour in an 8% hour day in engineering shops in Bengal
and elsewhere was defeated by the operatives. Similarly, in some Bombay
cotton mills which, prior to 1922, had worked the operatives for an 8
hour shift without any interval, the introduction of an hour’s statutory
interval led to a strike. Nor did a single employer who had adopted a
short day suggest that it would be better to lengthen the day and require
& correspondingly lower standard of concentration. Finally, few would
be prepared to assert that the cotton mill operative, when compared with
workers doing a shorter and more intense day, shows that greater con-
tentment which the longer and less intense day is supposed to yield.
Effect on Wages.
Bo far as the operatives are concerned, we cannot view the pos-
sibility of a reduction in earnings without misgiving. But we believe
that, if too large a reduction of hours is not attempted, the effect will be
small, and it is relevant to observe that real wages have recently risen
appreciably and are now higher than they have been for some years. Even
if a fall in wages results, it need not be permanent. With greater time for
genuine relaxation, many workers would probably require shorter holi-
days and fewer days of absence than at present, and could thus reduce the
loss which these breaks impose on them. Many employers believe firmly
that the average operative desires to earn merely sufficient for his bare
needs, and is unwilling to earn more by doing more work, i.e., that he
prefers leisure to a margin in wages. We discuss this view elsewhere and
cannot subscribe to it in the form in which it is usually presented. At the
same time, the great importance which the Indian worker attaches to
adequate leisure is a truth underlying it. It is also important to remem-
ber that, in the cotton mill industry in particular, there are still opportun-
ities for increased effort on the part of the operative. So far as we are
aware, there is no industrial country, except possibly China, where so
little is expected from him in effort and so much in attendance at the
factory. The average number of looms given to each weaver in India is
less than two and one spinner is ordinarily required for each side of a
frame. Attempts have recently been made to advance beyond the usual
standard and, even with existing hours, it should be possible to secure
improvement. We believe that, apart from any reduction of hours, em-
ployers will steadily increase their demand for efficiency from the operative.
Shorter hours should supply both an incentive and an enlarged opportun-
ity for raising the general standard of work.
Previous History.
The maintenance of the existing economic position of the industry
and its workers, in spite of a statutory reduction of hours, depends main-
ly on the extent to which the hours of actual work can be compressed into