60
INTERNATIONAL TRADE
aa and
did the leading branches of the cotton manufacture. But the
utilization of cheap common labor enabled them, not indeed to
hold their own without protective duties, but to get on with a
less barrier than would otherwise have been called for. The effect
was the same in kind as that on the cotton industry, but not so
marked in degree.
These peculiarities in the American labor situation did not rest
on permanent causes. They were due, as has already been said,
primarily to the great inflow of immigrants during the period in
question. The restrictive legislation of 1916 brought a complete
change, one whose effects will ramify far and in many directions,
but in no way more than in a new adjustment of the relative
wages of skilled and unskilled laborers. The differential will
become less pronounced in favor of the skilled as against the
unskilled. The industries which have adjusted themselves to a
large and relatively cheap supply of the unskilled will have to
readjust their ways. So far as they are subject to competition
from foreign industries, they will be in a less advantageous position
than before. The relations between the wages of the two groups
will probably come to be in the United States not different from
those in England, in Germany, and in Australia. This particular
source of comparative advantage (or of an offset to a comparative
disadvantage) will grow less and less, and probably will in the end
disappear.!
1 Tn these paragraphs I have sketched in bare outline the labor peculiarities of
the American industrial situation as it stood before 1916, with regard only to their
bearing on the particular phase of the theory of international trade here under con-
sideration. As regards other aspects of the situation — the economic and technical
development of the several industries, the tariff problems involved —1I refer the
reader to the extended discussion in my book on Some Aspects of the Tariff Question.