Selected Articles on Social Insurance |
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Page xlix
... Living Age . 265 : 419-28 . My . 14 , '10 . In search of homes for old age pensioners . Edith Sellers . Monthly Labor Review . 10 : 258-9 . Ja . '20 . Report of British departmental committee on old - age pensions . Monthly Labor Review ...
... Living Age . 265 : 419-28 . My . 14 , '10 . In search of homes for old age pensioners . Edith Sellers . Monthly Labor Review . 10 : 258-9 . Ja . '20 . Report of British departmental committee on old - age pensions . Monthly Labor Review ...
Page 4
... living , might be said to be in process of at- tainment . The complexity of the question is shown in that , in ad- dition to the theory and principal , it holds more than the usual number of technical points that must be given ...
... living , might be said to be in process of at- tainment . The complexity of the question is shown in that , in ad- dition to the theory and principal , it holds more than the usual number of technical points that must be given ...
Page 5
... living or merely protect from starvation ; the different forms of insurance require each separate consideration as to provisions , administration and safeguards . Universal insurance , which would socialize insurance in the highest ...
... living or merely protect from starvation ; the different forms of insurance require each separate consideration as to provisions , administration and safeguards . Universal insurance , which would socialize insurance in the highest ...
Page 13
... living was not so high , so that the pinch of poverty was not felt as quickly as at present , nor was its effect so severe . It is only the poverty which is the result of causes unavoid- able from the standpoint of the individual and ...
... living was not so high , so that the pinch of poverty was not felt as quickly as at present , nor was its effect so severe . It is only the poverty which is the result of causes unavoid- able from the standpoint of the individual and ...
Page 27
... living ; while thousands die in the prime of life , leaving helpless dependents . Still others , from one calamity or another , such as fire , business failures , bank failures , and stock swindlers , lose the accumulation which they ...
... living ; while thousands die in the prime of life , leaving helpless dependents . Still others , from one calamity or another , such as fire , business failures , bank failures , and stock swindlers , lose the accumulation which they ...
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Common terms and phrases
actuarial administration adopted American amount ance average awards burden Bureau cent charity cial claims Commission compensation insurance competitive compulsory health insurance compulsory insurance contributions cost death dependents disability effect efficiency employers established expense fact favor Federal Germany hazards I. M. Rubinow increase individual industrial accidents injured workmen injury insurance carriers insurance companies insurance fund labor legislation liability loss malingering Massachusetts maternity benefits ment mothers National National Civic Federation nomic non-contributory Ohio old age pensions organized paid payment Pennsylvania pensation pension system persons physician ployers poverty practically premiums present principle private insurance problem protection rates relief risk savings scheme sickness insurance social health insurance social insurance society sory stock companies surance thrift tion trade unions unem unemployment insurance United voluntary wage-earners wages weeks widows workers workmen's compensation laws York
Popular passages
Page 71 - It may be said in a general way that the police power extends to all the great public needs It may be put forth in aid of what is sanctioned by usage, or held by the prevailing morality or strong and preponderant opinion to be greatly and immediately necessary to the public welfare.
Page 100 - The ratings shall be based, as far as practicable, upon the average impairments of earning capacity resulting from such injuries in civil occupations...
Page 210 - The workers of America adhere to voluntary institutions in preference to compulsory systems which are held to be not only impractical but a menace to their rights, welfare and their liberty.
Page 267 - As long as you have taxes upon commodities which are consumed practically by every family in the country, there is no such thing as a non-contributory scheme. If you tax tea and coffee, and partly sugar, beer, and tobacco, you hit everybody one way or another.
Page 90 - The pecuniary liability of the employer for the treatment and other service herein required shall be limited to such charges as prevail in the same community for similar treatment of injured persons of a like standard of living when such treatment is paid for by the injured person.
Page 288 - Total disability' shall be deemed to be 'permanent' whenever it is founded upon conditions which render it reasonably certain that it will continue throughout the life of the person suffering from it.
Page 242 - In business and in the professions maturity of judgement and ripened experience offset, to some extent, the disadvantage of old age; but in the factory and on the railway, with spade and pick, at the spindle, at the steel converters there are no offsets.
Page 208 - The labor movement aims at constructive results — higher wages, which mean better living for the workers and those dependent upon them; better homes, better clothing, better food, better opportunities and shorter hours of work, which mean relief from over-fatigue, time for recuperation, workers with better physical development and with sustained producing power. Better physical development is in itself an insurance against illness and a degree of unemployment. The short hour workmen with higher...
Page 316 - ... maximum limit to the amount of benefit which can be drawn, both absolutely and in relation to the amount of contribution paid; or, in other words, we must in some way or other secure that the number of weeks for which a workman contributes should bear some relation to his claim upon the fund. Armed with this double weapon of a maximum limit to benefit and of a minimum contribution, the operation of the scheme itself will automatically exclude the loafer.
Page 210 - This governmental regulation tends to fix the citizens of the country into classes, and even divide the wage-workers into classes, and a long established insurance system would tend to make these classes rigid. There is in our country more voluntary social insurance than in any other country of the world. We have institutions whereby voluntary insurance can and will be increased.