Digitalisate EconBiz Logo Full screen
  • First image
  • Previous image
  • Next image
  • Last image
  • Show double pages
Use the mouse to select the image area you want to share.
Please select which information should be copied to the clipboard by clicking on the link:
  • Link to the viewer page with highlighted frame
  • Link to IIIF image fragment

Cost of living in German towns

Access restriction


Copyright

The copyright and related rights status of this record has not been evaluated or is not clear. Please refer to the organization that has made the Item available for more information.

Bibliographic data

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:
Get license information via the feedback formular.

Contents

Table of contents

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

Full text

522 
A more important cause of difference between the German and British figures is found 
in the fact that the occupations represented in them are different, and especially that the 
former give comparatively slight influence to trades which are characterised by large 
fluctuations of employment, while the latter give such trades a very considerable repre 
sentation in the statistics. 
Thus, in the British figures a large representation is given to the shipbuilding trades, 
in which fluctuations of employment are especially violent. So important, indeed, is this 
representation that the mere omission of the shipbuilding figures from the return for 
December last would reduce the average unemployed percentage from 6T to 5 3. While 
this is not the only case in which the English figures are influenced in an important degree 
by the inclusion of industries liable to disturbance beyond the average, the German figures 
include hardi y any important groups in which the unemployment rate is relatively high. 
In December lasïTfor example, only one-fourtli of the membership on which the returns 
were based was included in the unions whose unemployment rate exceeded the average 
2'7 per cent., and in these only two large federations, those of the workers in wood, and 
book-printers, were found. The fact that, for various reasons, the unions from which 
returns are received in Germany include but few important groups from trades which 
show marked fluctuations in the numbers employed, renders it impossible to treat the 
German average figures as in any sense directly comparable with the British. 
The practice of meeting slack periods by working shgrt time, rather than by a 
reduction of staff, appears to be very considerably more general in Germany than in the 
United Kingdom. How far this consideration may modify the return of numbers of 
unemployed may be illustrated from the case of coal-miners in this country. During 
1907, the percentage of coal-miners returned as unemployed varied between 0T and 0 3. 
The return of the shifts worked per week varied between an average of 5T7 in April, 5.22 in 
August, and 5 - 69 in February, while in all these months the pet centage returned as unemployed 
was 0'2. It is clear that the recorded percentage of unemployed among coal-miners fails to 
present, for comparison with other trades, an adequate representation of the degree of 
irregularity of employment. This illustrates the tendency of such figures where the practice 
of short time prevails. Some of the German authorities declare that the practice of short 
time in certain industries reduces earnings by as much as one-fourth to one-third in the 
course of a year. It is certain that, though certain British industries, notably coal-mining 
and the cotton industry, resort to the system of short time, the extent to which tKIs system 
operates to lower the figure of unemployed workmen in the United Kingdom is much less 
than in the German Empire. It is, however, impossible to estimate, even roughly, the 
proportionate effect on the percentage of unemployed returned by the tiade unions. 
(c) Considerations which tend to show that the Official Figure published in Germany is a 
less complete Record of the true Percentage of Unemployed Members of German Trade 
(Tnions than the Official Figure published in the United Kingdom is of Unemployed 
Members of British Trade Unions. 
Doubts have also been suggested as to the completeness of the figures under considera 
tion, and examination of the facts has not altogether removed the doubts. The earlier 
German figures appear to have comprised in the main only those unemployed who were 
actually in receipt of unemployed or travelling benefit. Since the autumn of 1906 the 
German Statistical Department has endeavoured to secure a complete return of all those 
members known to the unions to be out of work, and some of the more important of the 
German unions appear now to endeavour to secure as complete a return as possible of all 
members who are out of employment. Whether the same can be said of the unions 
generally is a question as to which the information at the disposal of the Board of Trade 
does not admit of a definite answer. It may, perhaps, be regarded as probable that some 
irregularity on this point yet remains, and affects the returns to some extent. This view 
receives some support from a consideration of such figures as those secured by the city of 
Dresden, in which, not only the total numbers of unemployed in the city, but their 
distribution according to the duration of their unemployment, is recorded. Considering 
these figures in relation to the period during which German trade unions ordinarily grant 
unemployed benefit to their members, and the proportion shown by the official returns 
between the unemployed in and out of benefit, it appears probable that the returns of 
those out of employment still fail, in not a few cases, to cover all those whom it is sought 
to include in the record. Some noteworthy difficulties present themselves in procuring 
the desired information, owing to the incomplete organisation of the German trade unions.* 
* That it is far from easy to secure a complete return of unemployed from all the branches of some of 
the German trade unions is illustrated by the following- cases :— 
The tobacco-workers of Bremen, after the issue of the new circular in the autumn of 1906, withdrew 
from contributing to the unemployed return on the ground that repeated efforts had failed to secure 
prompt returns—in some cases had failed to secure any return from branches (c.f. Reichs-Arbeitsblatt, 
October, 1906, p. 911). 
The federation of Catholic Labour Unions, at the end of 1906, had a total membership of 100,238. Only 
6,171 of these had contributed to the unemployment return, and the recorded total of unemployed benefit 
paid in the last three months of 1906 was £3 5s. These returns were considered so unsatisfactory that 
the suggestion to separate them from the general body of the returns is made (c.f. Reichs-Arbeitsblatt, 
January, 1907, p. 19). They have since been entirely discontinued. 
The group of trade unions known as “Free Unions” have returned percentages of unemployed regularly 
in excess of those of similar trades in other organisations. Reasons assigned for this, even as late as 
April, 1907, are an earlier payment of unemployed benefit and a special trade policy, these features 
contributing to a more complete record being secured than elsewhere (c.f. Reichs-Arbeitsblatt, April, 1907, 
p. 318). That these reasons should be assigned implies the incompleteness of the records of other unions.
	        

Download

Download

Here you will find download options and citation links to the record and current image.

Monograph

METS MARC XML Dublin Core RIS Mirador ALTO TEI Full text PDF EPUB DFG-Viewer Back to EconBiz
TOC

This page

PDF ALTO TEI Full text
Download

Image fragment

Link to the viewer page with highlighted frame Link to IIIF image fragment

Citation links

Citation links

Monograph

To quote this record the following variants are available:
URN:
Here you can copy a Goobi viewer own URL:

This page

To quote this image the following variants are available:
URN:
Here you can copy a Goobi viewer own URL:

Citation recommendation

Cost of Living in German Towns. Stat. Off., 1908.
Please check the citation before using it.

Image manipulation tools

Tools not available

Share image region

Use the mouse to select the image area you want to share.
Please select which information should be copied to the clipboard by clicking on the link:
  • Link to the viewer page with highlighted frame
  • Link to IIIF image fragment

Contact

Have you found an error? Do you have any suggestions for making our service even better or any other questions about this page? Please write to us and we'll make sure we get back to you.

Which word does not fit into the series: car green bus train:

I hereby confirm the use of my personal data within the context of the enquiry made.