LABOR’S NEW STATUS 275 New York Federal Reserve Bank, aptly described the zxtraordinary conditions which then prevailed, as follows :? But the gain to the worker has, of course, been immense —the relative “spread” between the wage level and the average “cost of living” having been in the last three years probably greater than at any time in the last half-century. The difference between these three years and the years im- mediately preceding the War is not less than 20 or 25 per cent. This must mean, for the 30-odd million wage-workers of the country, a difference in extra spending power of not less than 6 or 8 billions annually; which, in the writer’s mind, goes far to explain the prolonged building boom and huge sales of automobiles and other things formerly classed as luxuries. There is no doubt as to the accuracy of these statements. Large gains have accrued to labor as a whole, both from its added participation in the net revenue gains of industry and from the accompanying decline in prices of articles entering into the consumption of the average wage-earner’s family. As a general proposition, the poor in America since the war have grown richer along with the rich. It has been estimated that the purchasing power of wages in the United States has increased 35 per cent., as compared with the year 1913, or with the period immediately pre- ceding the World War. The studies of the Research Division of the American Federation of Labor also show that in March, 1928, the index of labor’s share in manu- facturing production was 10 per cent. greater than in 1922, the year immediately preceding the existing era of unpar- alleled industrial expansion. During the same period, it also estimated the share of labor in consumption to have advanced 15 per cent. Within the brief history of the new industrial revolution. so to speak, money wages in- “1%A New Composite Index of Wages in the United States,” by Carl Snyder, Journal, American Statistical Asso.. December. 1926.