Principles & Methods of Industrial Peace |
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Page xi
... circumstance that bargains between two combinations are economically indeterminate is not incompatible with the existence of ethical principles in accordance with which they ought to be arranged . § 2. Our problem is to ascertain these ...
... circumstance that bargains between two combinations are economically indeterminate is not incompatible with the existence of ethical principles in accordance with which they ought to be arranged . § 2. Our problem is to ascertain these ...
Page xii
... circumstances , it will also be injurious to the community considered as a whole § 3. This conclusion needs qualification when there is a prob- ability of improved conditions reacting favourably upon the efficiency of the work people ...
... circumstances , it will also be injurious to the community considered as a whole § 3. This conclusion needs qualification when there is a prob- ability of improved conditions reacting favourably upon the efficiency of the work people ...
Page xiii
... circumstances to be borne in mind in estimating the degree of elasticity prevailing in particular cases are discussed § 7. Owing to the practice of making for stock , the fluctuations in employers ' demand generally lag behind those of ...
... circumstances to be borne in mind in estimating the degree of elasticity prevailing in particular cases are discussed § 7. Owing to the practice of making for stock , the fluctuations in employers ' demand generally lag behind those of ...
Page 9
... circumstance . " The employed , like all other classes , are at once brigands , citizens , and work- nen . To gain their ends they have three appeals - to violence , to the Government , and to a strike . To all or any of these they may ...
... circumstance . " The employed , like all other classes , are at once brigands , citizens , and work- nen . To gain their ends they have three appeals - to violence , to the Government , and to a strike . To all or any of these they may ...
Page 31
... circumstances . There can be little doubt that this increased centralisation affords to the general body of the men valuable lessons in discipline and self - control , though these , perhaps , are not acquired without some loss of ...
... circumstances . There can be little doubt that this increased centralisation affords to the general body of the men valuable lessons in discipline and self - control , though these , perhaps , are not acquired without some loss of ...
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
Adjustment of Wages advantage agreement amount Anthracite Coal Strike arbitration argument Ashley award boot and shoe Bulletin of Labour C. D. Wright cause cent centralisation cerned circumstances Coal Strike commodity Conciliation Board conflict Consequently considerable curve demand for labour differences diminished dispute districts Durham miners earnings Econ economic effect efficiency efficiency wage elastic employers and employed fact factors of production Federation firms fixed given oscillation Hence Homestead strike ibid important increase Industrial Commission Industrial Peace International Typographical Union Jour Labour Commission labour demand Lancashire less machinery marginal utility matter ment North of England Northumberland occur organisation oscillation of demand particular parties period practice principles problem Proposition public demand question rate of wages Report representatives result settlement side sliding scale South Wales Strikes and Lock-outs tion Trade Unions U.S. Bulletin wage change wage rate Webb whole workmen workpeople xvii Zealand
Popular passages
Page 240 - Witnesses summoned before the commission shall be paid the same fees and mileage that are paid witnesses in the courts of the United States...
Page 238 - ... may invoke the aid of the United States courts to compel witnesses to attend and testify and to produce such books, papers, contracts, agreements and documents to the same extent and under the same conditions and penalties as is provided for in the Act to regulate commerce, approved February fourth, eighteen hundred and eighty-seven, and the amendments thereto.
Page 239 - Said commission may, from time to time, make or amend such general rules or orders as may be requisite for the order and regulation of proceedings before it, including forms of notices and the service thereof, which shall conform, as nearly as may be, to those in use in the courts of the United States.
Page 240 - All of the expenses of the commission, including all necessary expenses for transportation incurred by the commissioners or by their employees under their orders, in making any investigation, or upon official business in any other places than in the city of Washington, shall be allowed and paid on the presentation of itemized vouchers therefor approved by the commission.
Page 69 - The elasticity (or responsiveness) of demand in a market is great or small according as the amount demanded increases much or little for a given fall in price, and diminishes much or little for a given rise in price1.
Page 238 - All testimony before said board shall be given under oath or affirmation, and any member of the board shall have the power to administer oaths or affirmations. The board of arbitration, or any member thereof, shall have the power to require the attendance of witnesses and the production of such books, papers, contracts, agreements, and documents as may be deemed by the board of arbitration material to a just determination of the matters submitted to its arbitration...
Page 19 - It has happened to some of us to ascend a mountain slope just up to the point where the desire was just compensated by the difficulty, of further progress. Such is the position of the economic man on a primary short-period supply-curve sloping upwards. Suppose that, as a party of mountaineers press up a steep slope, the opposing crest gives way, and they are carried down by a sort of avalanche, and landed on a new inclined plane. Again they urge their toilsome march upwards; and again, before the...
Page 117 - ... employers and organizations of employees, as to the general conditions under which labor shall thereafter be performed. Such differences are likely to involve larger numbers of persons than those of the first class and to be more difficult of adjustment. The settlement of such general questions may be likened to an act of legislation; the interpretation and application of the general contract may be likened to a judicial act. We may now discuss the relation between the different practices named...
Page 239 - That for the purposes of this Act the commission may, whenever it deems it expedient, enter and inspect any public institution, factory, workshop, or mine, and may employ one or more competent experts to examine accounts, books, or official reports, or to examine and report on any matter material to the investigation in which such examination and report may be deemed of substantial assistance.
Page 52 - In trades which have any sort of monopoly the workers, by limiting their numbers, may secure very high wages at the expense partly of the employers, but chiefly of the general community. But such action generally diminishes the number of skilled workers and in this and other ways takes more in the aggregate from the real wages of workers outside, than it adds to those of workers inside: and thus on the balance it lowers average wages.