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31
OUR INDUSTRIAL PROBLEMS.
By “J.B.” (H. R. SLEEMAN, Whim Creek.) .
A eomnion circunistance is that a discus:
sion is misunderstood because its lumita-
tions, premises aud objectives are not de-
fined. This essay is limited to considering
one phase only of our economic and wdus-
trial life—that of the existing friction be-
tween Labour aud Capital. It assumes
that the present system of wealth distri-
bution is to continue as to principle. Its
objective is to hind and suggest procedures
that may tend lo eliminate the friction and
to replace it by wu spirit of co-operation.
Industrial trouble has its root mainly in
the desire of inditiduals to secure as much
as possible, or what they believe to be
their proper shate, of the general wealth
production. It is part of the biggest
problem of to-day--the social one. -Recoy-
nition of this fact 13 essential to under-
standing the situation and therefore to
apy prospect of tormulating helptul ideas
for its improvement.
The present social system 18 based—as
to its economic side—on the private own-
ership of property, no legal limits being
set to the amount of property to be own-
ed by onc person or to the degree
of inequality “thereby caused. Taxation is
the only factor tending to check the de
gree of accumulation in individual bands
and that check 18 a feeble one. Present
indications do not pomt to this commun-
ity altering that system in the near fu.
ture and its continuance is justifiably as-
gummed in dealing with present problems.
In this respect society has not greatly
altered from pre-existing periods. In other
directions, however. great changes have
occurred in personal liberty; in elimi-
nation of class privilege, other than that
of wealth accumulations in political power;
in the eqn: dispensation of justice; in
free and universal education, ete. The re.
sult of these clances (and partly their
eause) has been the growth of a dese
and determination among the majority of
the poorer members of society to receive
a, larger share of the community’s produe-
tion (wealth). They see a proportion of the
community's production absorbed by the
owners of “eanital™ bv virtue solely of
that ownership. They bebeve thal the pro-
portion is unduly large, constituting an
unjust drain on the products of their la
pour. They desire, and often collective-
ly demand, a larger share; heuce industrial
disputes.
Analysis of the rights and wrongs, if
there be such, of this eondition is not
the province of this essay, which 18 to
liscuss the issue in the hght of existing
facts. It will be geuverally agreed, how-
aver, that industrial disputes have served
Great Humanitarian Purposes
in the near past. The social system,
based on unrestricted individual owner.
ship and individual! freedom of contract
to sell one’s labour, oLvivusly tends wo the
noorer classes selling their labour too
sheaply, resulling in poverty and degrada-
tion to large numbers. with deteriorating
fects to the community as a whole. HKx-
serience also has proved this. Industrial
iisputes have been the main means of
rounteracting this tendency. They have,
;herefore, in the past, served adorable
yurposes. Whether they do so, or are
justified, to-day and in this country, is a
question intimately associated with our
oresent problem.
it seems certain that, so long as fight~
mg for better conditions will result in se-
quring them for the laboarer, such dis
putes will continue Nor can the tact
be criticised. It means simply that the
labourer will do wimt others have done,
and do. An essential question, therefore,
13 can industry on the whole now give the
labourer better conditions? Capital claima
shat it cannot: Labour that it eam
1f the primitive method of settling the
difference~of fighting it out—ig toc be
avoided, the obvious procedure seems so
have the problema compeaten¥y investigate
ed by men chosen for their ability to deal
with it, for their disinterestedness and wm»
nartiality. Recogmition—by both employee
and employer classcs—of their possessing
shose qualifications is desirable, perhapa
sggential. Such men ave not easily found.
gpecially as regards lis mutual recognise
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