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The new industrial revolution and wages

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fullscreen: The new industrial revolution and wages

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

Table of contents

  • The new industrial revolution and wages
  • Title page
  • Contents
  • Chapter I. Introduction
  • Chapter II. Pre-war principles and methods
  • Chapter III. The war period - an interregnum
  • Chapter IV. Post-war conflict and reconstruction
  • Chapter V. The emergence of a new constructive policy
  • Chapter VI. Abandonment of the cost-of-living and supply-and-demand theories
  • Chapter VII. Acceptance of the theory of an adequate basic wage
  • Chapter VIII. Acceptance and general application of the theory of productive efficiency
  • Chapter IX. Increased consumption and prospertity accepted as an outgrowth of lower costs and higher wages
  • Chapter X. The real significance of the new industrial revolution, and the conditions of future progress
  • Chapter XI. Constructive remedies needed
  • Chapter XII. Labor and the new industrial revolution
    Chapter XII. Labor and the new industrial revolution

Full text

A NEW CONSTRUCTIVE POLICY 70 
by way of greater consuming power lay in increased wages 
and incomes, and higher standards of living for the people. 
This fact was very forcibly stated by many representative 
industrial leaders. As typical of this changing attitude, 
Colonel Robert F. Stewart, Chairman of the Board of the 
Standard Oil Company of Indiana, in December, 1922, 
declared :? 
It were suicide to attempt to beat down wages and salaries 
to the bare level of the cost of living, and when I say “living” 
[ mean a good living; the kind of living that permits a 
thrifty man to build his own home, to properly clothe, feed 
and educate his wife and children. One industry can not 
profit at the expense of another. In this country our pros- 
perity is best assured by the prosperity of the entire people, 
not of this class or that class, and for American industry as 
a whole to seek to hold down the pay envelop so that it pro- 
vides only the bare necessities of life, were to weaken, and 
eventually to wreck, the greatest market which American 
industry possesses—the American market. 
Finally, the turning point came early in 1923, when the 
Secretary of Commerce, Herbert Hoover, publicly and 
unequivocally condemned the fallacy of assuming that the 
pre-war standards of living were “normal” standards. On 
the contrary, he vigorously stated, post-war “normal” 
standards were vastly different, and future prosperity, in 
turn, was contingent upon still further improving these 
living standards. His statements were so revolutionary at 
the time and were so significant in their bearing upon 
future developments, that liberal quotations may be profit- 
ably cited from them. In a speech delivered in the early 
part of 1923, Secretary Hoover said, in part :® 
We must get our minds away from the notion that pre- 
1 Bulletin of American Petroleum Institute, December 8, 1922. 
2 See Press Release by Department of Commerce of Speech of Mr. Hoover, 
delivered May 8, 1923.
	        

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Theoretische Sozialökonomie. Deichert, 1927.
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