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EMPLOYMENT PSYCHOLOGY, LABOR, AND INDUSTRY 381
tries, and governments as well. “The higher the fewer”
is a phrase the significance of which is now becoming
axiomatic. With regard to labor turnover, it may be
interpreted as meaning the higher the education the lower
the turnover. If statistics were available they would
undoubtedly show that the turnover among college grad
uates is lower than among any less educated group. The
same principle applies to every trade and profession
which requires a thorough training and preparation. The
expert tool maker and mechanic is one of the steadiest
of all workers. Wherever he is, he holds a dignified and
respected position. The same may be said of every other
craft or occupation which requires educated talent. Edu
cation, health, and employment go hand in hand.
As a corollary of this fact, it may be stated that the
fundamental cause of unemployment and instability is
the lack of education. For the past fifty years the edu
cation of boys and men for industrial work has been
neglected. The large number of expert mechanics, chem
ists, opticians, wood and iron workers, decorators, etc.,
etc., were drawn from European countries, notably France,
Germany, Switzerland, Sweden, Austria, and England.
As a consequence, the education of the youth of this
country was neglected, and they were compelled to be
satisfied with places requiring less expert ability. In
addition to this cause was the development of automatic
machines and the breaking down of all manufacturing
operations into a series of comparatively simple elements.
Flow far the simplification and division of labor have been
due to the lack of experts and educated workers who were
able to carry out an entire process, and how much of it
is due to the inventive genius of a small number of ex
ceptional individuals, is a question which can never be