INDUSTRIAL : ASSOCIATIONS OF CONSUMERS.
77
ployees of a Store Society would be found to have seats on its
Committee.
(5) Wholesale Societies.
Projit-sharing with Employees.
The English Co-operative Wholesale Society, which at the end
of 1910 employed 4,823 persons in its distributive and 13,053 in
its manufacturing departments,* does not now share profits with
its employees.
On this Society deciding in 1873 to establish its own work
shops for production, the members, upon the recommendation
of the Committee, adopted a scheme under which a bonus was to
be paid to the employees based partly upon the profits made by
the Society and partly upon an increase in sales. When the
dividend upon purchases paid to members reached 2d. in the £,
the employees were to receive a bonus of 2 per cent, upon their
wages, and an additional \ per cent, for each increase of \d. in
the £ in the dividend upon purchases, until the bonus upon wages
reached a maximum of 4 per cent. In addition, when the sales
of the Society for the year averaged £2 per quarter per head of
the total membership of the shareholding societies, a further
bonus of 1 per cent, upon wages was to be paid, with an additional
| per cent, for each increase of 2s. 6d. per head in the average
sales up to a maximum of 3 per cent, upon wages. This arrange
ment applied to all employees of the Society, whether engaged in
its productive or its distributive departments.
In 1876 the Committee of the Society reported that the bonus
system had not given satisfaction, and recommended its discon
tinuance, this course being adopted at a general meeting of
delegates by 150 votes to 78.
In 1882 the Committee introduced into certain departments a
system under which a bonus was to be paid based upon an
increase in sales and a decrease in expenses, subject to a certain
minimum of profit being shown on the working of the depart
ment. This was extended to a larger number of employees during
1885; but in 1886 the Committee again reported adversely upon
the scheme, with the result that it was abandoned, and no further
steps have been taken as regards Profit-sharing with employees.
In 1907 a “ Thrift Fund ” was established by the Society
for its employees. All the employees, distributive and pro
ductive, are eligible for membership on completion of six
* The English Wholesale Society carries on the following industries—
building, metal working, the manufacture of textiles, boots and shoes, and other
clothing, printing and bookbinding, woodworking, furnishing and brush-making,
the manufacture of soap, candles, starch, &c., flour milling, the manufacture of
biscuits, sweets, preserves, pickles, and of other food, and of tobacco, as well as
farming and dairying.