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This scarce antiquarian book is a selection from Kessinger
Publishing's Legacy Reprint Series. Due to its age, it may contain
imperfections such as marks, notations, marginalia and flawed
pages. Because we believe this work is culturally important, we
have made it available as part of our commitment to protecting,
preserving, and promoting the world's literature. Kessinger
Publishing is the place to find hundreds of thousands of rare and
hard-to-find books with something of interest for everyone
The first condition of "sweating" is an abundant and excessive
supply of low-skilled and inefficient labour. It needs no parade of
economic reasoning to show that where there are more persons
willing to do a particular kind of work than are required, the
wages for that work, if free competition is permitted, cannot be
more than what is just sufficient to induce the required number to
accept the work. In other words, where there exists any quantity of
unemployed competitors for low-skilled work, wages, hours of
labour, and other conditions of employment are so regulated, as to
present an attraction which just outweighs the alternatives open to
the unemployed, viz. odd jobs, stealing, starving, and the
poor-house.
The first condition of "sweating" is an abundant and excessive
supply of low-skilled and inefficient labour. It needs no parade of
economic reasoning to show that where there are more persons
willing to do a particular kind of work than are required, the
wages for that work, if free competition is permitted, cannot be
more than what is just sufficient to induce the required number to
accept the work. In other words, where there exists any quantity of
unemployed competitors for low-skilled work, wages, hours of
labour, and other conditions of employment are so regulated, as to
present an attraction which just outweighs the alternatives open to
the unemployed, viz. odd jobs, stealing, starving, and the
poor-house.
The first condition of "sweating" is an abundant and excessive
supply of low-skilled and inefficient labour. It needs no parade of
economic reasoning to show that where there are more persons
willing to do a particular kind of work than are required, the
wages for that work, if free competition is permitted, cannot be
more than what is just sufficient to induce the required number to
accept the work. In other words, where there exists any quantity of
unemployed competitors for low-skilled work, wages, hours of
labour, and other conditions of employment are so regulated, as to
present an attraction which just outweighs the alternatives open to
the unemployed, viz. odd jobs, stealing, starving, and the
poor-house.
The first condition of "sweating" is an abundant and excessive
supply of low-skilled and inefficient labour. It needs no parade of
economic reasoning to show that where there are more persons
willing to do a particular kind of work than are required, the
wages for that work, if free competition is permitted, cannot be
more than what is just sufficient to induce the required number to
accept the work. In other words, where there exists any quantity of
unemployed competitors for low-skilled work, wages, hours of
labour, and other conditions of employment are so regulated, as to
present an attraction which just outweighs the alternatives open to
the unemployed, viz. odd jobs, stealing, starving, and the
poor-house.
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