2]
CHAPTER III-THE EMPLOYMENT OF THE FACTORY
WORKER.
This chapter deals with a number of questions related to the
employment of the worker in perennial factories. Beginning with the
relationship of the supply of labour to the demand, we discuss the
recruitment of the worker and the control and supervision of his
employment in the factory. Next comes his education, with special
reference to his advancement and promotion, and in conclusion we
refer to unemployment.
Supply of Labour.
Throughout the greater part of its history, organised industry
in India has experienced a shortage of labour. A generation ago, this
shortage was apt at times to become critical. Towards the end of the
nineteenth century, after the plague epidemics, the difficulties of em-
ployers were acute, especially in Bombay ; and in 1905 the complaints of
employers in Bengal and the United Provinces led to an official enquiry
into the causes of the shortage.. Thereafter the position became easier
in the factory industries, but even in these, before the war, few employers
were assured of adequate labour at all seasons of the year. Some in-
dustries, such as tea-planting, particularly in Assam, are still in
constant need of more workers. Others, such as coal-mining, experience
a distinct shortage at certain seasons. Perennial factories, on the
other hand, have now reached a position in which most of them have
sufficient labour at all seasons and there is a surplus of factory labour
at several centres. The change has been gradual, and it has proceed-
ed at a different pace in different centres. In some areas, the opening
years of the war witnessed a change, but the influenza epidemic of
1918-19 exercised everywhere a retarding influence. Speaking generally,
it would be true to say that the turning point came during the last
five years. Up to that stage, labour tended to have the upper hand
in that there was competition for its services ; since then the tendency
has been for the workers to compete for jobs. The question of the
supply of suitable labour is one of vital importance for the future of
industry and of labour, and it is worth while considering whether or
not the change is likely to be permanent.
Causes of Scarcity.
The scarcity of labour in the past can be traced to a number of
factors. Of these the most obvious was the growth of Indian industry.
To a large extent factories, mines and even railways are the crea-
bion of the last generation. They employed conjointly about half a
million persons in 1892 and about two and a half million persons
in 1929. Every year employers increased their demands, so that recruit-
ing had to provide not merely for replacement, but also for an appre-
ciable addition. The population, it is true, was increasing, but not at
the same rate, and two great epidemics, those of plague in 1896-97 and
of influenza in 1918-19, had marked effects on the industrial popula-
tion. The factories. moreover. were able to draw only on limted areas.