<SPAN name="toc88" id="toc88"></SPAN>
<SPAN name="pdf89" id="pdf89"></SPAN>
<h2><span>Chapter III. Of Remedies For Low Wages.</span></h2>
<SPAN name="toc90" id="toc90"></SPAN>
<h3><span>§ 1. A Legal or Customary Minimum of Wages, with a Guarantee of Employment.</span></h3>
<p>
The simplest expedient which can be imagined for
keeping the wages of labor up to the desirable point would
be to fix them by law; and this is virtually the object aimed
at in a variety of plans which have at different times been,
or still are, current, for remodeling the relation between
laborers and employers. No one, probably, ever suggested
that wages should be absolutely fixed, since the interests of
all concerned often require that they should be variable; but
some have proposed to fix a minimum of wages, leaving the
variations above that point to be adjusted by competition.
Another plan, which has found many advocates among the
leaders of the operatives, is that councils should be formed,
which in England have been called local boards of trade, in
France <span class="tei tei-q">“conseils de prud'hommes,”</span> and other names; consisting
of delegates from the work-people and from the employers,
who, meeting in conference, should agree upon a
rate of wages, and promulgate it from authority, to be binding
generally on employers and workmen; the ground of
decision being, not the state of the labor market, but natural
equity; to provide that the workmen shall have <em class="tei tei-emph"><span style="font-style: italic">reasonable</span></em>
wages, and the capitalist reasonable profits.</p>
<span style="font-size: 90%">
The one expedient most suggested by politicians and labor-reformers
in the United States is an eight-hour law, mandatory
upon all employers. It is to be remembered, however, that in
very many industries piece-work exists, and if a diminution of
hours is enforced, that will mean a serious reduction in the
amount of wages which can be possibly earned in a day.
</span><span style="font-size: 90%">
Even if all industries were alike in the matter of arranging
their work, this plan means higher wages for the same work,
or the same wages for less work, and so an increased cost of
labor. This would, then, take its effect on profits at once; and
the effects would be probably seen in a withdrawal of capital
from many industries, where, as now, the profits are very low.
It must be recalled, however, that in the United States there
has been, under the influence of natural causes, unaided by
legislation, a very marked reduction in the hours of labor, accompanied
by an increase of wages. For example, in 1840,
Rhode Island operatives in the carding-room of the cotton-mills
worked fourteen hours a day for $3.28 a week, while in 1884
they work eleven hours and receive $5.40 a week. This result
is most probably due to the gain arising from the invention of
labor-saving machinery.
</span>
<p>
Others again (but these are rather philanthropists interesting
themselves for the laboring-classes, than the laboring
people themselves) are shy of admitting the interference of
authority in contracts for labor: they fear that if law intervened,
it would intervene rashly and ignorantly; they are
convinced that two parties, with opposite interests, attempting
to adjust those interests by negotiation through their
representatives on principles of equity, when no rule could
be laid down to determine what was equitable, would merely
exasperate their differences instead of healing them; but
what it is useless to attempt by the legal sanction, these persons
desire to compass by the moral. Every employer, they
think, <em class="tei tei-emph"><span style="font-style: italic">ought</span></em> to give <em class="tei tei-emph"><span style="font-style: italic">sufficient</span></em> wages; and if he does it not
willingly, should be compelled to it by general opinion; the
test of sufficient wages being their own feelings, or what they
suppose to be those of the public. This is, I think, a fair
representation of a considerable body of existing opinion on
the subject.</p>
<p>
I desire to confine my remarks to the principle involved
in all these suggestions, without taking into account practical
difficulties, serious as these must at once be seen to be. I
shall suppose that by one or other of these contrivances
wages could be kept above the point to which they would
be brought by competition. This is as much as to say, above
the highest rate which can be afforded by the existing capital
consistently with employing all the laborers. For it is a
mistake to suppose that competition merely keeps down
wages. It is equally the means by which they are kept up.
When there are any laborers unemployed, these, unless maintained
by charity, become competitors for hire, and wages
fall; but when all who were out of work have found employment,
wages will not, under the freest system of competition,
fall lower. There are strange notions afloat concerning
the nature of competition. Some people seem to imagine
that its effect is something indefinite; that the competition
of sellers may lower prices, and the competition of laborers
may lower wages, down to zero, or some unassignable minimum.
Nothing can be more unfounded. Goods can only
be lowered in price by competition to the point which calls
forth buyers sufficient to take them off; and wages can only
be lowered by competition until room is made to admit all
the laborers to a share in the distribution of the wages-fund.
If they fell below this point, a portion of capital would remain
unemployed for want of laborers; a counter-competition
would commence on the side of capitalists, and wages
would rise.</p>
<span style="font-size: 90%">
The assumption in the last chapter in regard to competition
and custom should be kept in mind in all this reasoning. As
a matter of fact, there is not that mobility of labor which insures
so free an operation of competition that equality of payment
always exists. In reality there is no competition at all
between the lower grades of laborers and the higher classes of
skilled labor. Of course, the </span><em class="tei tei-emph"><span style="font-size: 90%; font-style: italic">tendency</span></em><span style="font-size: 90%"> is as explained by Mr.
Mill, and as time goes on there is a distinctly greater mobility
of labor visible. Vast numbers pass from Scandinavia and
other countries of Europe to the United States, or from England
to Australia, urged by the desire to go from a community
of low to one of higher wages.
</span>
<p>
Since, therefore, the rate of wages which results from
competition distributes the whole wages-fund among the
whole laboring population, if law or opinion succeeds in
fixing wages above this rate, some laborers are kept out of
employment; and as it is not the intention of the philanthropists
that these should starve, they must be provided for
by a forced increase of the wages-fund—by a compulsory
saving. It is nothing to fix a minimum of wages unless
there be a provision that work, or wages at least, be found
for all who apply for it. This, accordingly, is always part
of the scheme, and is consistent with the ideas of more people
than would approve of either a legal or a moral minimum
of wages. Popular sentiment looks upon it as the duty of
the rich, or of the state, to find employment for all the poor.
If the moral influence of opinion does not induce the rich to
spare from their consumption enough to set all the poor at
work at <span class="tei tei-q">“reasonable wages,”</span> it is supposed to be incumbent
on the state to lay on taxes for the purpose, either by local
rates or votes of public money. The proportion between
labor and the wages-fund would thus be modified to the advantage
of the laborers, not by restriction of population, but
by an increase of capital.</p>
<SPAN name="toc91" id="toc91"></SPAN>
<h3><span>§ 2. —Would Require as a Condition Legal Measures for Repression of Population.</span></h3>
<p>
If this claim on society could be limited to the existing
generation; if nothing more were necessary than a compulsory
accumulation, sufficient to provide permanent employment
at ample wages for the existing numbers of the
people; such a proposition would have no more strenuous
supporter than myself. Society mainly consists of those who
live by bodily labor; and if society, that is, if the laborers,
lend their physical force to protect individuals in the enjoyment
of superfluities, they are entitled to do so, and have
always done so, with the reservation of a power to tax those
superfluities for purposes of public utility; among which
purposes the subsistence of the people is the foremost.
Since no one is responsible for having been born, no pecuniary
sacrifice is too great to be made by those who have
more than enough, for the purpose of securing enough to all
persons already in existence.</p>
<p>
But it is another thing altogether when those who have
produced and accumulated are called upon to abstain from
consuming until they have given food and clothing, not only
to all who now exist, but to all whom these or their descendants
may think fit to call into existence. Such an obligation
acknowledged and acted upon, would suspend all checks,
both positive and preventive; there would be nothing to
hinder population from starting forward at its rapidest rate;
and as the natural increase of capital would, at the best, not
be more rapid than before, taxation, to make up the growing
deficiency, must advance with the same gigantic strides.
But let them work ever so efficiently, the increasing population
could not, as we have so often shown, increase the produce
proportionally; the surplus, after all were fed, would
bear a less and less proportion to the whole produce and to
the population: and the increase of people going on in a constant
ratio, while the increase of produce went on in a diminishing
ratio, the surplus would in time be wholly absorbed;
taxation for the support of the poor would engross the whole
income of the country; the payers and the receivers would
be melted down into one mass.</p>
<p>
It would be possible for the state to guarantee employment
at ample wages to all who are born. But if it does
this, it is bound in self-protection, and for the sake of every
purpose for which government exists, to provide that no person
shall be born without its consent. To give profusely to
the people, whether under the name of charity or of employment,
without placing them under such influences that prudential
motives shall act powerfully upon them, is to lavish
the means of benefiting mankind without attaining the object.
But remove the regulation of their wages from their
own control; guarantee to them a certain payment, either by
law or by the feeding of the community; and no amount of
comfort that you can give them will make either them or
their descendants look to their own self-restraint as the proper
means for preserving them in that state.</p>
<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 0.90em"><span style="font-size: 90%">
The famous poor-laws of Elizabeth, enacted in 1601, were
at first intended to relieve the destitute poor, sick, aged, and
impotent, but in their administration a share was given to all
who </span><em class="tei tei-emph"><span style="font-size: 90%; font-style: italic">begged</span></em><span style="font-size: 90%"> it. Employers, of course, found it cheaper to hire
labor partly paid for by the parish, and the independent farm-laborer
who would not go on the parish found his own wages
lowered by this kind of competition. This continued a crying
</span><span style="font-size: 90%">
evil until it reached the proportions described by May: </span><span class="tei tei-q"><span style="font-size: 90%">“</span><span style="font-size: 90%">As
the cost of pauperism, thus encouraged, was increasing, the
poorer rate-payers were themselves reduced to poverty. The
soil was ill-cultivated by pauper labor, and its rental consumed
by parish rates. In a period of fifty years, the poor-rates were
quadrupled, and had reached, in 1833, the enormous amount
of £8,600,000. In many parishes they were approaching the
annual value of the land itself.</span><span style="font-size: 90%">”</span></span><SPAN id="noteref_173" name="noteref_173" href="#note_173"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">173</span></span></SPAN><span style="font-size: 90%"> The old poor-laws were repealed,
and there went into effect in 1834 the workhouse system,
which, while not denying subsistence to all those born,
required that the giving of aid should be made as disagreeable
as possible, in order to stimulate among the poor a feeling of
repugnance to all aid from the community. This is also the
general idea of poor-relief in the United States.
</span></p>
<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 0.90em"><span style="font-size: 90%">
The cultivation of the principle of self-help in each laborer
is certainly the right object at which to aim. In the United
States voluntary charitable organizations have associated together,
in some cities, in order to scrutinize all cases of poverty
through a number of visitors in each district, who advise
and counsel the unfortunate, but never give money. This system
has been very successful, and, by basing its operations on
the principle of self-help, has given the best proof of its right
to an increasing influence.
</span></p>
<SPAN name="toc92" id="toc92"></SPAN>
<SPAN name="Book_II_Chapter_III_Section_3" id="Book_II_Chapter_III_Section_3" class="tei tei-anchor"></SPAN>
<h3><span>§ 3. Allowances in Aid of Wages and the Standard of Living.</span></h3>
<p>
Next to the attempts to regulate wages, and provide
artificially that all who are willing to work shall receive an
adequate price for their labor, we have to consider another
class of popular remedies, which do not profess to interfere
with freedom of contract; which leave wages to be fixed by
the competition of the market, but, when they are considered
insufficient, endeavor by some subsidiary resource to make
up to the laborers for the insufficiency. Of this nature was
the allowance system. The principle of this scheme being
avowedly that of adapting the means of every family to its
necessities, it was a natural consequence that more should be
given to the married than to the single, and to those who had
large families than to those who had not: in fact, an allowance
was usually granted for every child. It is obvious that
this is merely another mode of fixing a minimum of wages.</p>
<p>
There is a rate of wages, either the lowest on which the
people can, or the lowest on which they will consent, to live.
We will suppose this to be seven shillings a week. Shocked
at the wretchedness of this pittance, the parish authorities
humanely make it up to ten. But the laborers are accustomed
to seven, and though they would gladly have more,
will live on that (as the fact proves) rather than restrain the
instinct of multiplication. Their habits will not be altered
for the better by giving them parish pay. Receiving three
shillings from the parish, they will be as well off as before,
though they should increase sufficiently to bring down wages
to four shillings. They will accordingly people down to that
point; or, perhaps, without waiting for an increase of numbers,
there are unemployed laborers enough in the workhouse
to produce the effect at once. It is well known that the allowance
system did practically operate in the mode described,
and that under its influence wages sank to a lower rate than
had been known in England before.</p>
<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 0.90em"><span style="font-size: 90%">
The operation of a low standard upon the wages of those in
the community who have a higher one, has been seen in the
United States to a certain extent by the landing on our shores
of Chinese laborers, who maintain a decidedly lower standard
of living than either their American or Irish competitors. If
they come in such numbers as to retain their lower standard
by forming a group by themselves, and are thereby not assimilated
into the body
of laborers who have
a higher standard of
comfort, they can, to
the extent of their
ability to do work,
drive other laborers
out of employment.
This, moreover, is
exactly what was
done by the Irish, who
drove Americans out
of the mills of New England, and who are now being driven
out, probably, by the French Canadians, with a standard lower
than the Irish. The Chinese come here now without their
families, as may be seen by the accompanying diagram, in
which the shaded side represents the males on the left, and the
unshaded the females on the right, of the perpendicular line.
</span></p>
<table summary="This is a table" cellspacing="0" class="tei tei-table" style="margin-bottom: 0.90em"><colgroup span="3"></colgroup><tbody><tr class="tei tei-row"><td class="tei tei-cell"><span style="font-size: 90%">Decade.</span></td><td class="tei tei-cell"><span style="font-size: 90%">Males.</span></td><td class="tei tei-cell"><span style="font-size: 90%">Females.</span></td></tr><tr class="tei tei-row"><td class="tei tei-cell"><span style="font-size: 90%">1</span></td><td class="tei tei-cell"><span style="font-size: 90%">6</span></td><td class="tei tei-cell"><span style="font-size: 90%">4</span></td></tr><tr class="tei tei-row"><td class="tei tei-cell"><span style="font-size: 90%">2</span></td><td class="tei tei-cell"><span style="font-size: 90%">106</span></td><td class="tei tei-cell"><span style="font-size: 90%">12</span></td></tr><tr class="tei tei-row"><td class="tei tei-cell"><span style="font-size: 90%">3</span></td><td class="tei tei-cell"><span style="font-size: 90%">351</span></td><td class="tei tei-cell"><span style="font-size: 90%">37</span></td></tr><tr class="tei tei-row"><td class="tei tei-cell"><span style="font-size: 90%">4</span></td><td class="tei tei-cell"><span style="font-size: 90%">283</span></td><td class="tei tei-cell"><span style="font-size: 90%">15</span></td></tr><tr class="tei tei-row"><td class="tei tei-cell"><span style="font-size: 90%">5</span></td><td class="tei tei-cell"><span style="font-size: 90%">139</span></td><td class="tei tei-cell"><span style="font-size: 90%">3</span></td></tr><tr class="tei tei-row"><td class="tei tei-cell"><span style="font-size: 90%">6</span></td><td class="tei tei-cell"><span style="font-size: 90%">32</span></td><td class="tei tei-cell"><span style="font-size: 90%">1</span></td></tr><tr class="tei tei-row"><td class="tei tei-cell"><span style="font-size: 90%">7</span></td><td class="tei tei-cell"><span style="font-size: 90%">10</span></td><td class="tei tei-cell"><span style="font-size: 90%">0</span></td></tr><tr class="tei tei-row"><td class="tei tei-cell"><span style="font-size: 90%">8</span></td><td class="tei tei-cell"><span style="font-size: 90%">1</span></td><td class="tei tei-cell"><span style="font-size: 90%">0</span></td></tr><tr class="tei tei-row"><td class="tei tei-cell"><span style="font-size: 90%">9</span></td><td class="tei tei-cell"><span style="font-size: 90%">0</span></td><td class="tei tei-cell"><span style="font-size: 90%">0</span></td></tr></tbody></table>
<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 0.90em"><span style="font-size: 90%">
The horizontal lines show the ages, the largest number being
about thirty years of age. It will be noted how many come in
the prime of life, and how few children and females there are.
</span></p>
<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 0.90em"><span style="font-size: 90%">
It need hardly be said that the economic side of a question
is here discussed, which requires for its solution many ethical
and political considerations besides.
</span></p>
<SPAN name="toc93" id="toc93"></SPAN>
<h3><span>§ 4. Grounds for Expecting Improvement in Public Opinion on the Subject of Population.</span></h3>
<p>
By what means, then, is poverty to be contended
against? How is the evil of low wages to be remedied?
If the expedients usually recommended for the purpose are
not adapted to it, can no others be thought of? Is the
problem incapable of solution? Can political economy do
nothing, but only object to everything, and demonstrate that
nothing can be done? Those who think it hopeless that the
laboring-classes should be induced to practice a sufficient
degree of prudence in regard to the increase of their families,
because they have hitherto stopped short of that point,
show an inability to estimate the ordinary principles of
human action. Nothing more would probably be necessary
to secure that result, than an opinion generally diffused that
it was desirable.</p>
<p>
But let us try to imagine what would happen if the idea
became general among the laboring-class that the competition
of too great numbers was the principal cause of their
poverty. We are often told that the most thorough perception
of the dependence of wages on population will not influence
the conduct of a laboring-man, because it is not the
children he himself can have that will produce any effect in
generally depressing the labor market. True, and it is also
true that one soldier's running away will not lose the battle;
accordingly, it is not that consideration which keeps each
soldier in his rank: it is the disgrace which naturally and
inevitably attends on conduct by any one individual which,
if pursued by a majority, everybody can see would be fatal.
Men are seldom found to brave the general opinion of their
class, unless supported either by some principle higher than
regard for opinion, or by some strong body of opinion elsewhere.</p>
<p>
If the opinion were once generally established among the
laboring-class that their welfare required a due regulation
of the numbers of families, the respectable and well-conducted
of the body would conform to the prescription, and
only those would exempt themselves from it who were in
the habit of making light of social obligations generally;
and there would be then an evident justification for converting
the moral obligation against bringing children into the
world, who are a burden to the community, into a legal
one; just as in many other cases of the progress of opinion,
the law ends by enforcing against recalcitrant minorities
obligations which, to be useful, must be general, and which,
from a sense of their utility, a large majority have voluntarily
consented to take upon themselves.</p>
<p>
The dependence of wages on the number of the competitors
for employment is so far from hard of comprehension,
or unintelligible to the laboring-classes, that by great bodies
of them it is already recognized and habitually acted on. It
is familiar to all trades-unions: every successful combination
to keep up wages owes its success to contrivances for
restricting the number of competitors; all skilled trades are
anxious to keep down their own numbers, and many impose,
or endeavor to impose, as a condition upon employers, that
they shall not take more than a prescribed number of apprentices.
There is, of course, a great difference between limiting
their numbers by excluding other people, and doing the
same thing by a restraint imposed on themselves; but the
one as much as the other shows a clear perception of the relation
between their numbers and their remuneration. The
principle is understood in its application to any one employment,
but not to the general mass of employment. For this
there are several reasons: first, the operation of causes is
more easily and distinctly seen in the more circumscribed
field; secondly, skilled artisans are a more intelligent class
than ordinary manual laborers; and the habit of concert,
and of passing in review their general condition as
a trade, keeps up a better understanding of their collective
interests; thirdly and lastly, they are the most
provident, because they are the best off, and have the most
to preserve.</p>
<SPAN name="toc94" id="toc94"></SPAN>
<h3><span>§ 5. Twofold means of Elevating the Habits of the Laboring-People; by Education, and by Foreign and Home Colonization.</span></h3>
<p>
For the purpose, therefore, of altering the habits of
the laboring people, there is need of a twofold action, directed
simultaneously upon their intelligence and their poverty.
An effective national education of the children of the laboring-class
is the first thing needful; and, coincidently with
this, a system of measures which shall (as the Revolution
did in France) extinguish extreme poverty for one whole
generation. Without entering into disputable points, it may
be asserted without scruple that the aim of all intellectual
training for the mass of the people should be to cultivate
common sense; to qualify them for forming a sound practical
judgment of the circumstances by which they are surrounded.
[But] education is not compatible with extreme
poverty. It is impossible effectually to teach an indigent
population. Toward effecting this object there are two resources
available, without wrong to any one, without any of
the liabilities of mischief attendant on voluntary or legal
charity, and not only without weakening, but on the contrary
strengthening, every incentive to industry, and every
motive to forethought.</p>
<p>
The first is a great national measure of colonization. I
mean, a grant of public money, sufficient to remove at once,
and establish in the colonies, a considerable fraction of the
youthful agricultural population. It has been shown by
others that colonization on an adequate scale might be so
conducted as to cost the country nothing, or nothing that
would not be certainly repaid; and that the funds required,
even by way of advance, would not be drawn from the capital
employed in maintaining labor, but from that surplus
which can not find employment at such profit as constitutes
an adequate remuneration for the abstinence of the possessor,
and which is therefore sent abroad for investment, or wasted
at home in reckless speculations.</p>
<p>
The second resource would be to devote all common
land, hereafter brought into cultivation, to raising a class of
small proprietors. What I would propose is, that common
land should be divided into sections of five acres or thereabout,
to be conferred in absolute property on individuals
of the laboring-class who would reclaim and bring them into
cultivation by their own labor.</p>
<span style="font-size: 90%">
This suggestion works to the same purpose as the proposal
that our Government should retain its public lands and aid in
the formation of a great number of small farmers, rather than,
by huge grants, to foster large holdings in the Western States
and Territories.</span><SPAN id="noteref_174" name="noteref_174" href="#note_174"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">174</span></span></SPAN>
<p>
The preference should be given to such laborers, and
there are many of them, as had saved enough to maintain
them until their first crop was got in, or whose character
was such as to induce some responsible person to advance
to them the requisite amount on their personal security.
The tools, the manure, and in some cases the subsistence
also, might be supplied by the parish, or by the state; interest
for the advance, at the rate yielded by the public funds,
being laid on as a perpetual quitrent, with power to the
peasant to redeem it at any time for a moderate number of
years' purchase. These little landed estates might, if it were
thought necessary, be indivisible by law; though, if the plan
worked in the manner designed, I should not apprehend any
objectionable degree of subdivision. In case of intestacy,
and in default of amicable arrangement among the heirs,
they might be bought by government at their value, and re-granted
to some other laborer who could give security for the
price. The desire to possess one of these small properties
would probably become, as on the Continent, an inducement
to prudence and economy pervading the whole laboring population;
and that great desideratum among a people of hired
laborers would be provided, an intermediate class between
them and their employers; affording them the double advantage
of an object for their hopes, and, as there would be
good reason to anticipate, an example for their imitation.</p>
<p>
It would, however, be of little avail that either or both
of these measures of relief should be adopted, unless on such
a scale as would enable the whole body of hired laborers
remaining on the soil to obtain not merely employment, but
a large addition to the present wages—such an addition as
would enable them to live and bring up their children in a
degree of comfort and independence to which they have
hitherto been strangers.</p>
<hr class="page" />
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