118 INDUSTRIAL REVOLUTION AND WAGES
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about greater cooperation and greater production from
their working forces.
Because of public policy, because it would do more than
anything else to produce sound citizenship in our self-
governing republic.
THE “Savings” AND “CULTURAL” WAGE
As the principle of a “living wage” received widespread
sanction and acceptance, the movement was accompanied
by a growing demand for the establishment of a still
higher minimum standard of compensation. It was held
that it was not sufficient to provide earnings which would
insure only a standard of health and modest comfort for
the unskilled wage-earner and his family, but it was
equally important that he should have surplus earnings for
savings in order to protect himself and his family against
the contingencies of unemployment, sickness, disability,
old age, and death. This gave rise to the advocacy of the
“savings wage” as the essential minimum standard. In
one of his public addresses in 1921, President Harding
made a statement on this point which became a standard
as to the significance and content of the savings-wage con-
ception. He said :*
In our effort at establishing industrial justice we must see
that the wage-earner is placed in an economically sound
position. His lowest wage must be emough for comfort,
enough to make his house a home, enough to insure that the
struggle for existence shall not crowd out the things truly
worth living for. There must be provision for education, for
recreation and a margin for savings. There must be such
freedom of action as will insure full play to the individual's
abilities.
This was a highly pregnant statement. President Hard-
ing stated his conviction that the lowest wage paid to a
1 From public address of President Warren G. Harding, New York City,
May 23, 1921.