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Cost of living in German towns

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fullscreen: Cost of living in German towns

Monograph

Identifikator:
866449027
URN:
urn:nbn:de:zbw-retromon-93831
Document type:
Monograph
Title:
Cost of living in German towns
Place of publication:
London
Publisher:
Stat. Off.
Year of publication:
1908
Scope:
1 Online-Ressource (LXI, 548 Seiten)
Collection:
Economics Books
Usage license:
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Contents

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  • Cost of living in German towns
  • Title page
  • Contents

Full text

280 
KÖNIGSBERG. 
a minimum rate of wages, increased by a percentage which varies between town 
and town, according to the cost of living. Including this increase, the weekly 
wages (on time work) in Königsberg are those shown in the Table. 
Woodworking Trades. In the wood-pulp making trade, which is of 
considerable local importance, the great bulk of the labour employed is 
unskilled. The wages shown in the Table are those for October, 1905. A 
year later they had improved, unskilled men earning 23s. in 70 hours, and* 
skilled mechanics 28s. in 66 hours. 
Tobacco Trades. The very small proportion of male labour (other than 
foremen) employed in cigar and tobacco factories is unskilled. 
Housing and Rents. 
Mention has already been made at the commencement of this report of the 
way in which Königsberg has been prevented by its fortifications from extending 
its boundaries so as to provide living space for a constantly increasing population. 
The disadvantages entailed upon the town through this cause have been 
aggravated by the fact that, besides being what is technically known asa" first 
class fortress,” Königsberg is also a great seaport, an important railway junction, 
the seat of a Provincial and District Government, the headquarters of an army 
corps and the seat of a University. Much space that would otherwise have 
been available as building land has been absorbed by these various public 
institutions. (The State Railway premises alone occupy an area of 101 acres 
inside the walls.) This has resulted in an ever-increasing congestion, wdiich 
gives the town an appearance of being overcrowded so far as its streets are 
concerned. Housing conditions, on the other hand, instead of deteriorating, 
have improved in recent years owing to the exigencies of the situation, which 
had reached a climax at the end of 1895 (wdien there were only 68 unoccupied 
dwellings in the whole town), having stimulated building enterprise. So great was 
this stimulus that quite one-third of all the dwellings of present-day Königsberg 
date from between 1895 and 1904. The increase in housing accommodation 
has been effected quite as much by demolishing old houses and erecting on the 
same site new ones with a larger number of rooms as by building on land which 
had previously been unoccupied. Indeed the probability is that the greater part 
of the increased accommodation lias been provided in the former way, if one may 
judge by the constant recurrence of new houses wedged between old ones in most 
parts of the town. The improvement in the supply of dwelling accommodation 
in the period 1895-1900 was shown by the housing censuses of those years. 
In 1895 it was found that 159,319 persons were housed in 84,832 rooms, or an 
average of 1*9 persons per room ; in 1900 there were 100,263 rooms with a 
total of 175,382 occupants or 1*7 persons per room. In 1895 5,264 persons were 
housed in basement dwellings consisting of 1,898 rooms or 2*8 persons per room. 
Five years later the number of basement dwellers had fallen to 4,609 persons, 
in 1,864 rooms, or 2 5 persons per room. The additional rooms required for the 
increasing population were provided in part by increasing the height of the houses. 
Thus, while in 1895 14'5 per cent, of all habitable rooms in Königsberg were 
situated on third, fourth or fifth stories, the proportion of rooms so situated was 
found to have increased during the succeeding five years to 18*1 per cent, of the 
total. The improvement in the supply of dwellings due to the increased activity 
of builders is also reflected in the increase in the number of unoccupied tenements 
from 68 in December, 1895, to 806 in April, 1900. Since October, 1901, an 
enumeration of unoccupied dwellings has taken place every year and has shown 
the following results :— 
Number of unoccupied 
dwellings. 
October, 1901 
1902 
1,434 
1,269 
1,809 
1,953
	        

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Cost of Living in German Towns. Stat. Off., 1908.
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