94 INDUSTRIAL REVOLUTION AND WAGES Justice Higgins, of the Australian Commonwealth Court of Conciliation and Arbitration, first declared that the principle of the “living wage” would be the foundation- stone of all industrial relations within the purview of that court. The Act of 1904 creating the Conciliation and Arbitration Court had provided that the minimum wages fixed by the court should be “fair and reasonable.” In the Harvester case of 1907, Mr. Justice Higgins stated that a “fair and reasonable” wage must mean a “living wage,” and he then gave his famous standard for the determina- tion of a living wage—“the normal needs of the average employee regarded as a human being in a civilized com- munity.” The “average” employee was also further described by this jurist as a married man with a wife and three dependent children. Since that time the living-wage principle has been accepted by every arbitration court in Australia. Its DEVELOPMENT IN AMERICA The origin and development of the living-wage principle in this country has already been set forth chronologically in- the preceding discussion. It will be recalled that in its early stages the movement took the form of a demand for an irreducible minimum wage, in order that industry and the State itself should be protected from the harmful effects of the low wage scales then prevailing, This mini- mum was first known as the “subsistence level” of living. It did not go farther than to provide for the bare physical needs of industrial workers and their families. It was a wage which was sufficient to maintain an average employee and his family only one step above poverty and dependency. During the years immediately preceding the entrance of America into the World War, a further advance was made. "1Ex Parte, H. V. McKay, 2 Commonwealth Arbitration Reports, p. 1.